Low-level 3DS emulator 3Beans released alongside setup tutorial video


When you talk about 3DS emulation, most people would jump to Citra. As the defacto choice since its first release it's seen tremendous success, and even after its abrupt discontinuation lives on in the various forks you can find online. Both Citra and its forks remain a fantastic choice for anybody wanting to jump into a 3DS game on their PC with as little effort as possible, but what about those who are after just that bit more? Let me introduce you to 3Beans.

Launched earlier this week, 3Beans separates itself from the pack by being a low-level 3DS emulator. What this means for you is that it doesn't just emulate the game you're trying to play, but the whole 3DS firmware too. This allows you to, on top of running games, install custom firmware, to make use of Luma3DS' various features, or even run userland homebrew right from the ever-nostalgic 3DS home menu. The sky is the limit, and it's a genuinely impressive effort. Setup is naturally a touch more complex than with other 3DS emulators, with 3Beans needing various firmware files to operate, as well as an SD card image. The creator Hydr8gon has fortunately included a setup guide with the announcement video that's easy enough to follow assuming you have a 3DS with custom firmware to hand.

Those interested in trying it out for themselves can find the latest automated build over on the project's GitHub releases page. 3Beans is available for Windows, Linux, and Mac, with each version requiring you to dump your own files from a 3DS system.

:arrow: GitHub Page
 
finally a low level 3ds emulator, Thanks

How is its accuracy?

Can I use this emulator with open_agb_firm to play GBA games?
can I use this emulator to play NDS games?
 
Last edited by branchus,
If you don’t have a 3DS, this is useless because you need a nand.bin file to run it properly.
Yes, I'm not sure how not many gathered this as all emulators require a Bios/NAND of sorts to access its respective console home menu such as pcsx2, MelonDS, etc.
 
Last edited by ChronoCrossfangirl2002,
the idea to emulate a hardware near to perfection i s amazing its a great project :) , but since i doscovery dolphin a long time ago forcing internal resolution, vr, AA, free cam and many other feartures i always start to search emulators that bring "something more" than the regular hardware can do. will be awsome an post that shows something like that comparing what the some emulators do best than original hardware"
 
the idea to emulate a hardware near to perfection i s amazing its a great project :) , but since i doscovery dolphin a long time ago forcing internal resolution, vr, AA, free cam and many other feartures i always start to search emulators that bring "something more" than the regular hardware can do. will be awsome an post that shows something like that comparing what the some emulators do best than original hardware"

Emulators striving for precision doesn't mean they wont allow for something else in the future
 

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