Also glad to see more and more progress with the emulator. My disabled brother can't hold a 3DS and hasn't been able to play the new Fire Emblem, or the Zelda remakes, or Mario 3D Land or anything great like that. Emulators like Citra can help people like my brother play games that would otherwise be lost to them.
Why are lots of people who don't know anything about programming even trying to simulate the Ocarina of Time demonstration? Obviously the developer has special configurations that allowed them to run the game. You won't be able to play the game.
I'm like you.I'm so happy with your hard work guys. You gave me the motivation. I want to help developing this emulator can I? I know bothing about programing. Zero. Just tell me what I need to do and learn and I will. And then I want to help porting this to android too. And I'm Portuguese by the way sorry for my English and congrats for your hard work.
I also fell in that trap. That download isn't from the official web page.Okay, I tried to use this but the download just starts with trying to give me a bunch of other stupid-looking applications. Is this real or not?
Are the developers of this emulator using the leaked SDK at all to help with supporting more games? That's what commercial games are compiled with, so I'm sure it would help. As long as it's purely clean-room reverse engineering (meaning no code is actually copied from the SDK to use in the emulator, but rather just used to study how it works) I'm sure it would be legal.
There's no denying that most if not all emulators out there rely on leaked docs and SDKs. It's fine though since we can just pretend that the code is a result of clean room RE.