You gon have that man buy a chrome book and get back home disappointed as hell![]()

Any WINDOWS BASED LAPTOP
You gon have that man buy a chrome book and get back home disappointed as hell![]()
any info or links would be very appreciated
Edit: I just seen Dre Space Age already answered your question.So I need 3.3 ghz and 8 gb ram to run the most demanding tool (ps2 emulator)
Apple expensive as hell, Which Windows computer should I get?
Why no ps2Edit: I just seen Dre Space Age already answered your question.
Apple is expensive, but you were looking for something under $1,000. You can get one for that price range easy and run open emu (OpenEmu) which is the emulator I use and love it. It has a ton of emulators and runs smooth as hell.
I also keep retro emulators on a thumb drive for windows to play on my downtime at work. No PS2 emulator though.
I'm trying to run all ea games gta tony hawk veiwtiful Joe and dragon ball zAre you trying to run the games in 720p/1080p? otherwise most laptops should be able to do the job
They haven't been able to emulate it properly yet from what I understood, but @Dre Space Age said he has it up and running.Why no ps2
I used my ps2 emulator to run devil may cry 3, shadow of the colossus, zone of the enders 2 and metal gear solid 3. I had issues with devil may cry 3 cut scenes at first but i followed some random YouTube tutorial to adjust the settings in the emulator and i was good. I don't remember if i posted that in the thread or not tho. I mainly created that emulation thread to document my own experience and jot down notes and shyt.They haven't been able to emulate it properly yet from what I understood, but @Dre Space Age said he has it up and running.
They have independent teams/people work on emulators all the time trying to make them as polished as possible.
There was an XBOX project for a while, I don't know what ever happened to it.
Emulating retro stuff from the Nintendo 64 gen back is very easy and almost any PC can handle it.
From what I understand, PS2 forward is where things get tricky.
If your focus is emulating games in general you could get away with a Raspberry Pi3 and use retro pi.
Accessories and everything will run you less than $100.
Dre can correct me if I'm wrong but I don't think the PS2 emulators out there are really up to snuff right now.
You might want to focus on the old gens, but again, I don't have experience with trying the PS2 emus myself so i can't say with certainty.
I have plans to make a full cabinet retro arcade machine using a raspberry pi 3.