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After being complained by players about "misplaced goods", the N64 emulator of the Nintendo Switch is now improved

Last year, Nintendo launched its own N64 game console expansion package on the Switch, as a host that competed with PS in the 90s of the last century, N64 actually has a lot of fun games, helpless opponents are too strong, and now with the Switch this new generation platform, you can let players relive the classic is also very good, but after everyone paid a subscription fee that needs to be paid every month, but found that the quality of this N64 simulation is worrying, I thought it would be played, I didn't expect Nintendo to be quite responsible, and now after the new version of NSO 1.2, the N64 simulation game has a better performance

In the latest video of the MVG channel, it is mentioned that after the Switch updated the N64 simulator, in the absolute classic game "The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time", compared to the original version of "A Pool of Backwater", the new version has now a wave, closer to the simulation quality on the previous WiiU, but compared to the Original version, there is still a lack of "fog" effect rendering on the Switch, and in some dark scenes, the lighting effect is also different from the original version.

After being complained by players about "misplaced goods", the N64 emulator of the Nintendo Switch is now improved

The surface effect has improved

After being complained by players about "misplaced goods", the N64 emulator of the Nintendo Switch is now improved

But the "fog" effect is still missing

However, MVG said that in fact, the "fog" effect can be made out by modifying the code, but other effects will be missing, so this may also be the reason why Nintendo officials do not get it for the time being. In addition, in the input delay of many player reactions, the new version is also improved, but it is relatively small, about only 1-2ms reduction, which is not enough for sensitive master players.

In the simulator circle, N64 belongs to the relatively easy to run (the earliest simulator in the early 2000s), but to accurately simulate all the effects of the original machine is extremely difficult, even the Nintendo official who holds the software and hardware source code is not very good, but from this "dead sheep" point of view, they should continue to improve, and there will be more N64 games to land swtich this expansion package service.

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