It’s a single player (and local multiplayer) multi-system emulator front-end. OpenEmu does not apparently support emulator tweaking (no super-hi-res PS1 emulation or widescreen hacks), nor does it support netplay, or streaming. When you add a game to your library, the box art thumbnail just shows up automatically, no further action required on the user’s behalf.
As many Playstation 1 era games are turning 20 years old now and Sony has abandoned any concept of backwards compatibility, it’s great to have an easy way to manage an archive of our collections. bin/.cue file pair, you just add them as a pair, and they show up correctly without any trouble. In the past, adding CD-based games to your “library” in OpenEmu was hit-or-miss. When you run OpenEmu, all of the systems you see in the list are supported “out of the box.” It’s a mouse-driven UI designed to focus on your ROM collection, organized by system. OpenEmu’s strength is its MacOS-native interface. Thanks to OpenEmu ( covered here previously), emulation of about 30 consoles “just works.” We also now have RetroArch, a competing multi-system emulator that works on far more than just MacOS.
You no longer have to “get your hands dirty” to emulate a ton of game consoles on MacOS.
Clearly I have not been updating this blog, but one of the reasons for that is that emulation has become much more user-friendly in the past few years.