A far more amazing feat than the banned gaffer who overclocked his PS3 -->
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOU2GikRRY8&feature=channel_video_title
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tOU2GikRRY8&feature=channel_video_title
It really is.Sgt.Pepper said:I forgot how awesome the music was in that game.
big_z said:i dont really think the framerate improves like the video says. it just looks faster which gives the illusion of being slightly smoother.
if nintendo gives us a proper star fox 3 on wii U i wouldnt mind seeing the first two games remade in HD as a nice bonus.
Jaroof said:Fox: Badabadabadabada!
Falco: J-J-J-Jammin'!
brohmbel said:Looks like Nintendo beat him to it:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=byQiyzLM1f0
I know, its almost as bad as intros filled with random gameplay and anime clips from unrelated games, backed with annoying music.KevinCow said:Why do people on Youtube insist on sticking a minute of slowly scrolling text at the beginning of their video instead of describing shit in the description.
Because that's what it's for. It's called the description. You're supposed to describe your video down there.
Oh fuck me, I can't unhear it.Jaroof said:Fox: Badabadabadabada!
Falco: J-J-J-Jammin'!
That's actually the reason why I dislike using the emulator to play Star Fox. Feels so unnatural... lolMarrshu said:Doesn't playing Star Fox on an inaccurate emulator achieve similar effects? I honestly thought it was one case of inaccuracy being useful. =P
Now I'm sadomg.kittens said:I really really really really want a good new Starfox game.
:-(
Google Wing DamageFernando Rocker said:Fox: Du Daa dab we dab!
Peppy: Weh wu wip, we we wip
Slippy: Bibba dibba, Bibba dibba
Falco: We we be Jammin'
Nope, you get speedups rather than removing slowdowns - as in, the entire game runs faster, messing with the timings of things. It's because console games, particularly for older consoles, aren't designed to just run at any speed like PC games, where if you run on a faster PC it smoothes the framerate - they are designed only to run at the speed the system runs at, so if the system goes faster, the entire game goes faster.ramine said:Is there a way to "overclock" emulators like Snes9x, Nestopia, Gens? Eg: emulate the machine with a CPU at a high clock than original, so there are no slowdowns
Fernando Rocker said:Fox: Du Daa dab we dab!
Peppy: Weh wu wip, we we wip
Slippy: Bibba dibba, Bibba dibba
Falco: We we be Jammin'
Edit: Actually I misread ramine's post, I thought he was asking if it were possible to achieve the same thing as the video in an emulator not If you could just eliminate slow down.Dreamwriter said:Nope, you get speedups rather than removing slowdowns - as in, the entire game runs faster, messing with the timings of things. It's because console games, particularly for older consoles, aren't designed to just run at any speed like PC games, where if you run on a faster PC it smoothes the framerate - they are designed only to run at the speed the system runs at, so if the system goes faster, the entire game goes faster.
Billychu said:No amount of over clocking would make Stunt Race FX a good game.
Blade Runner and Outcast are example for PC of games that have troubles on faster CPU of modern days.Dreamwriter said:Nope, you get speedups rather than removing slowdowns - as in, the entire game runs faster, messing with the timings of things. It's because console games, particularly for older consoles, aren't designed to just run at any speed like PC games, where if you run on a faster PC it smoothes the framerate - they are designed only to run at the speed the system runs at, so if the system goes faster, the entire game goes faster.