You think no one will pick up the old code and work on it?
You think the original devs won't consider going back at it through a means that is anonymous and minimizes their risk?
I've never ever seen a platform with an emulator lose the emulator without someone eventually filling the void. The interest is there. More people than ever can code.
No I mean these forks popping up are all just that, forks. There's no developers behind them. Everyone's trying to find which fork will continue where yuzu left off, but none of them have anyone working on them. It's gonna take time for the dust to settle.
I mean, that’ll only affect new releases. And even then, it’ll probably only affect new releases that are doing things in radically new ways. Old/current games (and even lots of new releases) will be fine to play.
Yuzu is dead. Long live Yuzu.
That which is dead may never die
But rises again, harder and stronger.
Only problem is active development of it
You think no one will pick up the old code and work on it?
You think the original devs won't consider going back at it through a means that is anonymous and minimizes their risk?
I've never ever seen a platform with an emulator lose the emulator without someone eventually filling the void. The interest is there. More people than ever can code.
No I mean these forks popping up are all just that, forks. There's no developers behind them. Everyone's trying to find which fork will continue where yuzu left off, but none of them have anyone working on them. It's gonna take time for the dust to settle.
I mean, that’ll only affect new releases. And even then, it’ll probably only affect new releases that are doing things in radically new ways. Old/current games (and even lots of new releases) will be fine to play.
It's Nuzu now.
The creator of that fork closed it down within a day.
Aww damn!
It's "suyu, pronounced 'sue you'" now
Hopefully we don't run out of letters.