path to see exactly where the emulator expects the files to be stored.
However, for the "top" systems (PS1, Saturn, N64), LLE remains the standard. In fact, the upcoming Ares v140+ release is rumored to add:
The necessity of BIOS files creates a significant legal and usability barrier. While the ares source code is perfectly legal, the BIOS firmware is copyrighted intellectual property owned by the hardware manufacturers (e.g., Sony, Sega).
The speakers emitted a sound that wasn't digital; it sounded like a choir whispering in a language he almost understood.
path to see exactly where the emulator expects the files to be stored.
However, for the "top" systems (PS1, Saturn, N64), LLE remains the standard. In fact, the upcoming Ares v140+ release is rumored to add:
The necessity of BIOS files creates a significant legal and usability barrier. While the ares source code is perfectly legal, the BIOS firmware is copyrighted intellectual property owned by the hardware manufacturers (e.g., Sony, Sega).
The speakers emitted a sound that wasn't digital; it sounded like a choir whispering in a language he almost understood.