Galaxy S7 is supported again and works! No games are included with this download. Dump your own real PSP games and turn them into.ISO or.CSO files, or simply play free homebrew games, which are available online. Put those in /PSP/GAME on your SD card / USB storage. See for more information.
How to download and run PPSSPP Gold – PSP emulator on your PC and Mac PPSSPP Gold – PSP emulator For PC can be easily installed and used on a desktop computer or laptop running Windows XP, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10 and a Macbook, iMac running Mac OS X. This will be done using an Android emulator. To install PPSSPP Gold – PSP emulator For PC, we will use BlueStacks app player. The method listed below is set to help you get PPSSPP Gold – PSP emulator For PC. Go ahead and get it done now.
This device is an Android emulator which gives you a chance to copy an Android screen on the PC/ Mac. With the assistance of this application, you’ll have the capacity to run your Android applications on PC simply like the [PPSSPP Gold] game. * Emulates a Mac II series machine running OS 7.0.1 through 8.1, depending on the ROM used. * The PSP memstick can be mounted on the Mac desktop (requires File Manager 1.2).
Runs on basically everything, but it’s a little harder to get working on Mac OS X. At least the main site now hosts compiled binaries for OS X, which is an improvement from not too long ago when the only binaries available were on a third party build site. We no longer have to run the Windows version under a Wine wrapper. Things have come a long way.
But you still have to download and install a dependency first: the SDL runtime (Simple DirectMedia Layer), because the developer follows the Linux philosophy of no statically linked libraries (“make it the user’s problem to try to recreate the exact dynamic library setup that the developer used through trial-and-error!”). There are directions for installing SDL if you use Homebrew as your package manager. I don’t, though. I use MacPorts. The two are mutually exclusive, and would interfere with each other if you were to try using them together. So this post is about how to get PPSSPP working if you are a MacPorts user.
First, I assume you’ve gotten XCode from the App Store, opened it to download the XCode command line tools, and then installed MacPorts. If you run the following commands, you can correctly set up the LibSDL dependency. Sudo port install libsdl sudo ln /opt/local/lib/libSDL-1.2.0.dylib /usr/local/lib/libSDL-1.2.0.dylib sudo ln /opt/local/lib/libSDL.a /usr/local/lib/libSDL.a sudo ln /opt/local/lib/libSDL.dylib /usr/local/lib/libSDL.dylib sudo ln /opt/local/lib/libSDLmain.a /usr/local/lib/libSDLmain.a Do you get an OS X CrashWrangler bug report dialog, saying it crashed because it couldn’t find “/usr/local/lib/libSDL-1.2.0.dylib”? You might have not created the aliases correctly in /usr/local/lib. Do you get a “Segmentation fault: 11” with a thread that crashes in the pthread library, while the main thread is trying to call SDLSetVideoMode from its own SDLMain?
Then you probably aliased libSDL-1.2.0.dylib correctly, but messed up the others. I did that once.
Why is PPSSPP not statically linked to its dependencies? Why does it not save user data in the right place (it will save your games in a hidden folder, very non-Mac like: you’ll have to open up “/Users/yourname/.config/PPSSPP/” to find your save files, the ini files where you enter per-game cheats, etc.)?