higan, the multi-system emulator ================================ higan emulates a number of classic videogame consoles of the 1980s and 1990s, allowing you to play classic games on a modern general-purpose computer. As of v102, higan has top-tier support for the following consoles: - Nintendo Super Famicom/Super Nintendo Entertainment System, including addon hardware: - Super Game Boy - Sufami Turbo - Nintendo Game Boy Advance It also includes some level of support for these consoles: - Satellaview addon for the Super Famicom - Nintendo Famicom/Nintendo Entertainment System - Nintendo Game Boy - Nintendo Game Boy Color - Sega Master System - Sega Game Gear - Sega Megadrive/Genesis - NEC PC Engine/TurboGrafx 16 (but not the CD-ROM² System/TurboGrafx-CD) - NEC SuperGrafx - Bandai Wonderswan - Bandai Wonderswan Color **Note:** Some consoles were released under different names in different geographic regions. To avoid listing all possible names every time such a console is mentioned, higan uses the name from the console's region of origin. In practice, that means Japanese names: "Famicom" and "Super Famicom" instead of NES and SNES, "Mega Drive" instead of "Genesis", "PC Engine" instead of "TurboGrafx-16". higan is actively supported on FreeBSD 10 and above, and Microsoft Windows 7 and above. It also includes some level of support for GNU/Linux and macOS. If you want to install higan and try it out, see the [Quick Start](#quick-start) section below. higan is officially spelled with a lowercase "h", not a capital. About this document ------------------- This is the unofficial higan README, a community-maintained introduction and reference. It may be out of date by the time you read this, and it may contain errors or omissions. If you find something that's wrong, or you have a suggestion, see "Unofficial higan resources" below. Official higan resources ------------------------ - [Official homepage](https://byuu.org/emulation/higan/) - [Official forum](https://board.byuu.org/viewforum.php?f=4) Unofficial higan resources -------------------------- - [Source code repository](https://gitlab.com/higan/higan/) archives official higan releases and WIP snapshots since approximately v067r21. - [Quark shader repository](https://github.com/hizzlekizzle/quark-shaders) collects shaders that higan can use to add special effects like TV scanlines to its video output, or smarter algorithms for scaling up to modern PC resolutions. See [Installing custom shaders][shaders] below for details. - [Mercurial Magic](https://github.com/hex-usr/Mercurial-Magic/) is a tool for converting MSU-1 games and mods into a format higan can use. See [Importing MSU-1 games][msu1] below for details. [shaders]: #installing-custom-shaders [msu1]: #importing-msu-1-games There are also other projects based on current or older versions of higan, in whole or in part, that you might want to check out. - [Mednafen](https://mednafen.github.io/) is another multi-system emulator. Its Super Famicom emulation is based on bsnes v059, from the time before bsnes was renamed to higan. - [BizHawk](http://tasvideos.org/BizHawk.html) is another multi-system emulator, specialising in the creation of tool-assisted speedruns. Its Super Famicom emulation is based on bsnes v087. - [nSide](https://github.com/hex-usr/nSide) is a fork of higan that greatly enhances its NES emulation support, and adds minor features to the other cores too. It also restores the "balanced" Super Famicom emulation core that was removed from higan in v099, which is less CPU intensive than the current accuracy-focussed core. - [bsnes-plus](https://github.com/devinacker/bsnes-plus) is a fork of bsnes v073 that adds improved support for debugging Super Famicom software. Quick Start =========== TODO - install - configure inputs - load a game - connect a controller Installing and uninstalling higan ================================= The best way to install higan depends on what platform you're using, as well as whether you want to use official binaries or compile the source-code from scratch. Installing an official release on Windows ----------------------------------------- Official higan releases are distributed in [7-zip][7z] archives. You will need to install 7-zip, or another compatible archiving tool, to install higan. [7z]: http://www.7-zip.org/ Once you have a suitable archiving tool, extract the contents of the higan archive into a new folder. When you're done, the new folder should contain `higan.exe` and `icarus.exe` along with other assorted files and directories that describe the systems higan emulates. You may put that folder wherever you like. To run higan, open the `higan.exe` file. Before you can actually play games, you'll need to [import them](#the-game-library) and [configure higan](#configuring-higan). If you want to play Game Boy Advance games, you will need [a GBA BIOS](#installing-the-gba-bios). Uninstalling an official release on Windows ------------------------------------------- Delete the folder containing `higan.exe` and the other associated data from the original archive. To remove higan's configuration: 1. Press Win+R to open the Run dialog 2. Type `%LOCALAPPDATA%` and press Enter to open the folder where higan's configuration data lives 3. Delete the subdirectories named `icarus` and `higan` if they exist. You might also want to remove the games imported into higan's library (including in-game saves and save-states): 1. Press Win+R to open the Run dialog 2. Type `%USERPROFILE%` and press Enter to open the folder where higan keeps its game library 3. Delete the folder named `Emulation` if it exists Compiling from source on Windows -------------------------------- You will need a copy of the higan source-code. If you download an official release from the higan homepage, you will need [7-zip][7z] or a compatible tool to extract it. Alternatively, you may obtain higan source code from [the unofficial git repo](https://gitlab.com/higan/higan/) using the Git source-code management tool, or by clicking the download button on the right-hand side of the web-page and choosing an archive format. You will need a C++ compiler to compile higan. We recommend installing [TDM64-GCC][tdm], preferably the latest version but anything newer than 4.9 should be fine. higan does not support building with clang++ (Clang is still not quite there yet for Windows) nor Microsoft Visual C++ (last we checked, it didn't support all the C++ features higan uses). **Note:** Make sure you get TDM64-GCC, not TDM-GCC. When compiled in x86 (32-bit) mode, higan may crash at startup because gcc targeting x86 does not support Windows' structured exception handling (SEH). Also, historically in x86 mode gcc has miscompiled a part of the NES emulation core. See the higan forum [for](https://board.byuu.org/viewtopic.php?p=41977#p41977) [details](https://board.byuu.org/viewtopic.php?p=42253#p42253). Once you've installed mingw-w64, open a command-prompt window, type `g++ --version` then press Enter to check it's installed correctly. You should see a message like g++ 1.2.3 20010101 Copyright (C) 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. ...except it should mention the version of mingw that you installed and the corresponding dates. If you see an error message like "command not found" or "bad command or filename", you may need to add mingw's "bin" folder to your computer's `%PATH%`. See the mingw documentation for help with that. Once mingw is installed and available from the command prompt: 1. Put the higan source code in some convenient location, like `C:\higan-src` 2. Open the command-prompt 3. Type `cd C:\higan-src` (or wherever you put the higan source) and press Enter 4. Type `mingw32-make -C icarus compiler=g++` and press Enter to build the icarus import tool 5. Type `mingw32-make -C higan compiler=g++` and press Enter to build the main higan executable [tdm]: http://tdm-gcc.tdragon.net/download Installing a compiled build on Windows -------------------------------------- 1. In Windows Explorer, create the folder where you want higan to live 2. Assuming you built higan in `C:\higan-src`, copy `C:\higan-src\icarus\out\icarus.exe` into the new folder 3. Copy `C:\higan-src\icarus\Database` and its contents into the new folder 4. Copy `C:\higan-src\higan\out\higan.exe` into the new folder 5. Copy all the `*.sys` directories in `C:\higan-src\higan\systems` into the new folder The new folder should now contain `icarus.exe`, `higan.exe`, a folder named `Database`, and half a dozen folders named after the systems higan emulates with `.sys` at the end. This is what you would get by downloading an official build, as described under [Installing an official release on Windows][instwin] above. [instwin]: #installing-an-official-release-on-windows Before you can actually play games, you'll need to [import them](#the-game-library) and [configure higan](#configuring-higan). If you want to play Game Boy Advance games, you will need [a GBA BIOS](#installing-the-gba-bios). Uninstalling a compiled build on Windows ---------------------------------------- The process is the same as [Uninstalling an official release on Windows][uninstwin] above. You may also wish to delete the higan source folder. [uninstwin]: #uninstalling-an-official-release-on-windows Compiling from source on Linux ------------------------------ You will need a copy of the higan source-code. If you download an official release from the higan homepage, you will need [7-zip][7z] or a compatible tool to extract it. Alternatively, you may obtain higan source code from [the unofficial git repo](https://gitlab.com/higan/higan/) using the Git source-code management tool, or by clicking the download button on the right-hand side of the web-page and choosing an archive format. You will also need GCC 4.9 or higher, including the C and C++ compiler, GNU Make, and development files (headers, etc.) for the following libraries: - GTK 2.x - PulseAudio - Mesa - gtksourceview 2.x - Cairo - SDL 1.2 - libXv - libAO - OpenAL - udev On a Debian-derived Linux distribution, you can install everything you need with a command like: sudo apt-get install build-essential libgtk2.0-dev libpulse-dev \ mesa-common-dev libgtksourceview2.0-dev libcairo2-dev libsdl1.2-dev \ libxv-dev libao-dev libopenal-dev libudev-dev Once you have all the dependencies installed, you may build and install higan. Note: Run these commands as yourself, **do not run them as root** (no `sudo`, no `su`, etc.), because higan does not support being installed system-wide. 1. Put the higan source code in some convenient location, like `~/higan-src` 2. Open a terminal window 3. Type `cd ~/higan-src` (or wherever you put the higan source) and press Enter 4. Type `make -C icarus compiler=g++` and press Enter to build the icarus import tool 5. Type `make -C higan compiler=g++` and press Enter to build the main higan executable Installing a compiled build on Linux ------------------------------------ Assuming you have successfully compiled higan as described in the previous section: 1. Open a terminal window 2. Type `cd ~/higan-src` (or wherever you put the higan source) and press Enter 3. Type `make -C icarus install` and press Enter to install icarus and its game database 4. Type `make -C higan install` and press Enter to install higan and its supporting files This installs higan and its associated data files into the `~/.local` directory hierarchy. To confirm higan is installed correctly, type `higan` in a terminal and press Enter. If the higan window appears, everything is working. On the other hand, if you get an error message like "command not found", you should double-check that the directory `~/.local/bin` is included in your `$PATH` environment variable by running the following command in a terminal: echo "$PATH" | tr ':' '\n' | grep ~/.local/bin If the above command prints the full path of `~/.local/bin` (for example: `/home/yourname/.local/bin`) then you should be good. If it prints nothing, you need to add the following line to `~/.profile`: export PATH=~/.local/bin:$PATH (this line must be in `~/.profile` because most GUIs do not read any other files at login) If you also have a `~/.bash_profile`, make sure it reads the contents of `~/.profile` with a line like this: source ~/.profile You will need to log out and log back in for changes to `~/.profile` or `~/.bash_profile` to take effect. Before you can actually play games, you'll need to [import them](#the-game-library) and [configure higan](#configuring-higan). If you want to play Game Boy Advance games, you will need [a GBA BIOS](#installing-the-gba-bios). Uninstalling a compiled build on Linux -------------------------------------- To uninstall higan, as installed by the above instructions: 1. Open a terminal window 2. Type `cd ~/higan-src` (or wherever you put the higan source) and press Enter 3. Type `make -C icarus uninstall` and press Enter 4. Type `make -C higan uninstall` and press Enter To remove higan's configuration, delete the directory `~/.config/higan` as well. To remove the games imported into higan's library (including in-game saves and save-states), delete the directory `~/Emulation`. You may also wish to delete the higan source directory. Installing the GBA BIOS ----------------------- For most of the systems higan emulates, the console itself contains (almost) no actual software, so emulating the system does not require infringing the copyright of the hardware manufacturer. However, the Game Boy Advance is different: every device contains a standard library of software routines for [common functions games require][bios], often called a "BIOS" by analogy with the Basic Input/Output System used in IBM PC compatibles. For the same legal reasons that commercial games cannot be distributed with emulators, the GBA BIOS cannot be distributed with higan, but is required for GBA software to run. If you have a real GBA and a flashcart, the Internet contains many tools that will extract the BIOS image so it can be copied to your desktop computer. The correct GBA BIOS file is exactly 16384 bytes long, and has the SHA-256 hash fd2547724b505f487e6dcb29ec2ecff3af35a841a77ab2e85fd87350abd36570. Once you have the correct BIOS file: 1. rename it to `bios.rom` - if you're using Windows, turn off "hide extensions for known file types" so you don't wind up with a file called `bios.rom.dat` or whatever the file's original extension was. 2. Copy the file into higan's `Game Boy Advance.sys` directory, alongside the `manifest.bml` file that is already there. - In Windows, find `Game Boy Advance.sys` in the same folder as `higan.exe` - In Linux, find `Game Boy Advance.sys` in `~/.local/share/higan/` **Note:** If you upgrade this version of higan to a newer version, make sure the `bios.rom` file winds up in the `Game Boy Advance.sys` directory of the new version. [bios]: http://problemkaputt.de/gbatek.htm#biosfunctions The higan interface =================== When you launch higan, the main window appears, with a menu-bar across the top, a status-bar across the bottom, and a large area in the middle where the game's video output appears. The Library menu ---------------- The Library menu allows you to import games into higan's game library, and to load games from the library. higan organises the games in your library according to which console they were intended to run on. To play a game for a particular console from your library, click on the Library menu, click on the console manufacturer submenu (Nintendo for the Super Famicom, Bandai for the WonderSwan, etc.) then click on the console menu item. A window will appear listing all the games in your library for that particular console. Select the game you want to play and click the Open button, or just double-click the game, and it will begin playing as though you'd just turned on the console. To add a new game to your library, choose "Load ROM File ..." from the Library menu. A [filesystem browser](#the-filesystem-browser) will appear, allowing you to pick any ROM image for any supported system, with any of the most common file extensions. It also allows loading ROM images from `.zip` archives, if the archive contains a single ROM image. **Note:** Some games require extra steps to import correctly; see [the Game Library](#the-game-library) for details. To add many games at once, run icarus, or choose "Import ROM Files ..." from the Library menu (which just runs icarus anyway). See [the icarus interface](#the-icarus-interface) for more information about bulk-importing. For more information about the higan game library, see [The Game Library](#the-game-library) below. The console menu --------------- **Note:** The console menu does not appear until a game is loaded. Also, it's not named "console", it's named for the kind of console the loaded game runs on. For example, when playing a Game Boy game, you will have a "Game Boy" menu. The console menu contains commands relevant to the particular console being emulated. All consoles will have some of the following items, but few consoles have all of them. - **Controller Port 1** allows you to connect different emulated controllers to the first controller port, if there is one. - See [the Configuration dialog](#the-configuration-dialog) for information about configuring which host controller inputs are used for the emulated controllers. - This menu appears for the Famicom, even though the Famicom did not support alternate controllers, because the Famicom emulation core also emulates the NES, which did. - **Controller Port 2** allows you to connect different emulated controllers to the second controller port, if there is one. - See [the Configuration dialog](#the-configuration-dialog) for information about configuring which host controller inputs are used for the emulated controllers. - This menu appears for the Famicom, even though the Famicom did not support alternate controllers, because the Famicom emulation core also emulates the NES, which did. - **Expansion Port** allows you to connect different emulated devices to the console's expansion port, if there is one. - For the Super Famicom, the [21fx][21fx] is a homebrew device that allows a program running on a PC to control a physical Super Famicom (or SNES). This option allows the same program to control the emulated SNES, for development or testing. - **Power Cycle** restarts the loaded game as though the emulated console were switched off and on again. - **Unload** stops the current game, as though the emulated console were switched off. You can load the same or a different game from [the Library menu](#the-library-menu). [21fx]: https://github.com/defparam/21FX The Settings menu ----------------- The Settings menu allows you to configure things that aren't specific to any particular console. - **Video Scale** determines the size and shape of the emulated console's video output in windowed mode (as opposed to fullscreen). - **Video Emulation** applies various effects to the emulated console's video output to reproduce some behaviours that aren't technically part of the console itself. - "Blurring" simulates the limited horizontal resolution of standard-definition TVs by blurring together horizontally-adjacent pixels. Games like Jurassic Park for the Super Famicom depend on this to emulate a transparency effect. For hand-held consoles like the Game Boy Advance, this simulates the slow response time of the cheap LCD screens these consoles used by blurring each output frame with the previous one. - "Colors" simulates the way a console's display device differs from modern computer monitor's colour reproduction. In particular, it simulates the slightly-different gamma correction used by the Super Famicom, the dim, washed out colours of the original Game Boy Advance, and the pea-green display of the original Game Boy. - **Video Shader** controls how the low-resolution video output of the emulated console is scaled up to suit modern high-resolution displays. The availability of items in this submenu depends on which video driver higan is using, so see [Drivers](#drivers) for more information. - "None" draws each output pixel according to the colour of the single nearest input pixel, sometimes called "nearest neighbour" scaling. This produces unnaturally crisp and blocky images. - "Blur" draws each output pixel by averaging the colours of the four nearest input pixels, sometimes called "bilinear" scaling. This produces unnaturally blurry images. - When using the OpenGL [driver](#drivers), an additional item appears in this menu for each installed Quark shader. See [Installing custom shaders](#installing-custom-shaders) for details. - **Synchronize Audio** causes higan to wait for audio playback to complete before resuming emulation. This should reduce popping and glitching noises, and slows the emulation down to approximately the correct speed. If your PC cannot emulate at full-speed, (60fps for most consoles, 75fps for WonderSwan) this has no noticable effect. - **Mute Audio** causes higan to not output sound from the emulated console. The sound hardware is still emulated. - **Show Status Bar** causes higan to show or hide the status bar at the bottom of the window. This option has no effect in full-screen mode. See [The status bar](#the-status-bar) for more information. - **Video ...** opens the Video tab of [the Configuration dialog][cfgdlg]. - **Audio ...** opens the Audio tab of [the Configuration dialog][cfgdlg]. - **Input ...** opens the Input tab of [the Configuration dialog][cfgdlg]. - **Hotkey ...** opens the Hotkeys tab of [the Configuration dialog][cfgdlg]. - **Advanced ...** opens the Advanced tab of [the Configuration dialog][cfgdlg]. [svsa]: #why-do-synchronize-video-and-synchronize-audio-conflict [cfgdlg]: #the-configuration-dialog The Tools menu -------------- The Tools menu contains features for manipulating the emulated console. - **Save Quick State** stores the current state of the emulated console into one of the quick state slots. See [Save States](#save-states) for more information. - **Load Quick State** restores the emulated console to a state previously saved to one of the quick state slots. See [Save States](#save-states) for more information. - **Cheat Editor** opens [the Cheat Editor window](#the-cheat-editor) - **State Manager** opens [the State Manager window](#the-state-manager) - **Manifest Viewer** opens [the Manifest Viewer window](#the-manifest-viewer) The Help menu ------------- The Help menu contains information about higan itself. - **Documentation** loads the official higan documentation in your web-browser. - **About** opens the About dialog, which displays basic information about higan, including the version number. The status bar -------------- The status bar appears at the bottom of the main higan window, while "Show Status Bar" is ticked in [the Settings menu](#the-settings-menu). Before any game is loaded, the status bar displays "No cartridge loaded". When a game is loaded and running, the status bar displays the current emulation speeed in frames-per-second. For PAL-based consoles, this should be around 50 FPS for "full speed" emulation, for NTSC and most portable consoles the ideal speed is 60 FPS, but the WonderSwan runs at 75 FPS. If the number is too low, you may need a faster computer, or a faster [video driver](#drivers). If the number is too high, you may need to [Synchronize Audio](#the-settings-menu), or you may have pressed the "turbo" [hotkey](#the-configuration-dialog). The status bar displays "Paused" if you have pressed the "pause" [hotkey](#the-configuration-dialog), or if "When focus is lost: Pause Emulation" is ticked in [the Input tab of the Configuration dialog](#the-configuration-dialog) and the main higan window is not the foreground window. To resume emulation, make sure the main higan window is in the foreground, and/or press the "pause" hotkey. The status bar briefly displays "Selected quick state slot X" (where X is one of the Quick State slot numbers) when you press the "Increment Quick State" or "Decrement Quick State" hotkeys, to show which Quick State slot will be used the next time you press the "Save Quick State" or "Load Quick State" hotkeys. The status bar briefly displays "Slot X quick state does not exist" (where X is one of the Quick State slot numbers) when you choose a slot from the [Tools](#the-tools-menu) → "Load Quick State" sub-menu that has not had a save-state saved to it, or when you press the "Load Quick State" hotkey while the current Quick State slot has not had a save-state saved to it, The status bar briefly displays "Power cycled" when you choose "Power Cycle" from [the console menu](#the-console menu), or press the "Power Cycle" hotkey. The status bar briefly displays "Display rotation not supported" when you press the "Rotate Display" hotkey while the emulated console does not support display rotation. The Configuration dialog ----------------------- The Configuration dialog contains less-frequently-modified configuration options. Most of these can be safely ignored, or set once and never changed again. The dialog has a tab for each main category of options: - **Video**: This tab contains options that affect how higan displays the emulated console's video output. - "Saturation" adjusts the vibrancy of colours displayed, where 0% makes things pure grey, 100% is normal, and 200% is garishly brightly coloured. - "Gamma" adjusts how bright mid-range colours are compared to the brightest colours, where 100% is normal, and 200% makes mid-range colours much darker. - "Luminance" adjusts the overall brightness, where 100% is normal, and 0% is totally black. - "Overscan Mask" hides parts of the video output that would have been hidden by the bezel around the edge of a standard-definition television screen. Some games (particularly on the Famicom) displayed random glitchy output in this area, which can be distracting. The units are "pixels in the emulated console's standard video-mode". For example, setting "Horizontal" to 8 will clip 8/256ths from the left and right sides of the Super Famicom's video output, whether the Super Famicom is in lo-res (256px) or hi-res (512px) mode. - "Aspect Correction" (in both Windowed Mode and Fullscreen Mode) stretches the image to match the aspect ratio produced by the original console hardware, but can cause a "ripple" effect, due to rounding errors. - "Resize Window to Viewport" (under "Windowed mode") causes higan to resize its window to fit snugly around the emulated console's video whenever it changes size: because a game was loaded for a different console with a different display size or aspect ratio, because the "Overscan Mask" controls were adjusted, because the game switched to a different video mode, because the user pressed the "Rotate Display" hotkey, etc. When this option is disabled, the higan window stays at a fixed size, large enough to contain the video for any supported console, padded with black borders for all smaller video modes. - "Resize Viewport to Window" (under "Fullscreen mode") causes higan to stretch the emulated console's video output to touch the edges of the screen. Since most screens are not an exact multiple of the size of all emulated consoles, this may cause a "ripple" effect, due to rounding errors. When this option is disabled, higan stretches the emulated console's video output to the largest exact multiple of the emulated console's video output that is smaller than or equal to the screen size. - TODO: Update this to match 103r11, or whatever the latest version is. - **Audio**: This tab contains options that affect how higan reproduces the emulated console's audio output. - "Device" allows you to choose which audio device higan sends the emulated game's audio to. - "Frequency" controls the sample-rate that higan will use when generating audio. If your PC's audio hardware has a "native" sample-rate and you know what it is, pick that. Otherwise, 44.1kHz or 48kHz should be fine. - "Latency" controls how much audio output higan calculates in advance. Higher values reduce the chance of "popping" or "glitching" noises, but increase the delay between an action occurring on-screen and the corresponding sound-effect being played. - "Exclusive Mode" appears if the current audio driver allows higan to take exclusive control of your PC's audio output, so no other applications can play sounds. This can improve audio quality, and lower the effective audio latency. - "Volume" controls the overall loudness of the emulated console's audio, where 100% is normal volume, and 0% is complete silence. - "Balance" controls the relative loudness of the left and right speakers, where 0% means only the left speaker produces sound, 50% means both speakers produce sound equally, and 100% means only the right speaker produces sound. - "Reverb" adds a slight reverberation effect to the emulated console's audio output, as though the console were in a tunnel or small room. - **Input**: This tab controls which PC inputs are used for which emulated controllers. The exact PC inputs that can be mapped depend on [the input driver](#drivers). - "Pause Emulation" automatically pauses emulation when the main higan window is not the current foreground window. - "Allow Input" can be ticked when "Pause Emulation" is *not* ticked, and allows configured inputs to keep affecting higan even when higan is running in the background. This is particularly relevant if you configure your PC keyboard to control higan: if you tick this box, and switch to a different application leaving higan running in the background, typing in that other application may affect the emulated game running in higan even though you can't see it! - The console selector chooses which console's inputs to display in the mapping list below. - The port selector chooses which port of the selected console to display in the mapping list below. - The controller selector chooses which controller associated with the given console and port to display in the mapping list below. - The mapping list includes every button and axis on the selected controller, and the PC inputs that are mapped to it when it is connected to the selected port of the selected console. - To map a keyboard or gamepad button on your PC to a controller button, double-click the controller button in the list, or select it and press Enter. The window will grey out, and a message will appear in the bottom left: "Press a key or button to map [the button]". Press the key or button you want to map, and it should appear in the list next to the controller button it is mapped to. - To map a mouse button on your PC to a controller button, select the controller button in the list, then click one of the "Mouse Left", "Mouse Middle", or "Mouse Right" buttons in the bottom-left of the window. - To map a joystick axis on your PC to a controller axis, double-click the axis in the list, or select it and press Enter. The window will grey out, and a message will appear in the bottom left: "Press a key or button to map [the axis]". Press the joystick in the direction you want to map, and it should appear in the list next to the controller button it is mapped to. - To map a mouse axis on your PC to a controller axis, select the axis in the list, then click one of the "Mouse X-axis", or "Mouse Y-axis" buttons in the bottom-left of the window. - The "Rumble" setting for the Game Boy Advance is treated like a button, and can be mapped to a PC gamepad. When the emulated Game Boy Advance tries to use the rumble feature of the Game Boy Player, higan will turn on the force-feedback of whatever gamepad the mapped button is part of. - If you start mapping a button or axis, but decide you don't want to, you can press Escape to exit the "Press a key or button to map..." mode without actually mapping anything. - "Erase" removes the mapping for the selected button or axis. - "Reset" removes all the mappings currently in the list. - **Hotkeys**: This tab is like "Inputs" above, except it contains controls for higan itself, instead of for the emulated console. - "Toggle Fullscreen" puts higan into fullscreen mode, where the menu and status bar are hidden, and the emulated console's video output is enlarged to cover the entire screen. Toggling fullscreen also automatically captures the mouse. - "Toggle Mouse Capture" hides the usual mouse-cursor, and captures the mouse so it cannot leave the higan window. This is useful when the mouse is being used to emulate a light-gun controller like the Super Scope. - "Save Quick State" saves the current state of the emulated console to the currently-selected Quick State slot. - "Load Quick State" restores the emulated console to the state saved in the currently-selected Quick State slot. - "Decrement Quick State" selects the previous Quick State slot. The status bar will briefly display the new current slot number. - "Increment Quick State" selects the next Quick State slot. The status bar will briefly display the new current slot number. - "Pause Emulation" pauses the emulated console until the Pause Emulation hotkey is pressed a second time. - "Fast Forward" disables audio and video synchronisation for as long as it's held down, so emulation proceeds as quickly as possible. If your PC struggles to hit "real time" (60fps for most emulated consoles), this likely won't have any effect. - "Power Cycle" turns the emulated console off and back on, (a "hard reset"), just like the "Power Cycle" menu item in [the console menu](#the-console-menu). - "Rotate Display" will toggle the display of the Game Boy Advance and WonderSwan (Color) between the usual landscape orientation and a portrait orientation (90° counter-clockwise). These consoles have games that expect the player to hold the console in a different way. - **Advanced**: This tab contains all the settings that didn't fit into one of the other categories. - "Video" controls how higan will draw the emulated console's video output to the PC screen. "None" means no video will be drawn. See [Drivers](#drivers) for details. - "Audio" controls how higan will present the emulated console's audio output. "None" means no audio will be played. See [Drivers](#drivers) for details. - "Input" controls how higan checks for input from the PC's input devices. "None" means the emulated console cannot be controlled. See [Drivers](#drivers) for details. - "Location" selects where the [Game Library](#the-game-library) looks for games to load. See [Moving the Game Library](#moving-the-game-library) for more information. - "Ignore Manifests" makes higan ignore the manifest file in the a loaded game's [game folder](#why-game-folders) in favour of asking icarus to guess a manifest on the fly. This means that incompatible or incorrect manifests generated by old versions of icarus won't cause problems, but means you can't fix incorrect manifests generated by the current version of icarus. See also the "Create Manifests" option in [the icarus Settings dialog](#the-icarus-settings-dialog). The Cheat Editor ---------------- For some consoles, higan supports applying temporary changes to the code of a running game. For example, you could disable the code that registers when the player takes damage, resulting in an "invulnerability" mode. Currently, higan supports cheats for the following consoles: - Famicom - Super Famicom - Game Boy - Master System - PC Engine - Wonder Swan A cheat code of the format `addr=data` will cause the emulated console to obtain `data` whenever it reads from memory address `addr`. A cheat code of the format `addr=comp?data` will cause reads from `addr` to obtain `data`, but only if the true value at `addr` is `comp`. In both formats, `data` is a single byte expressed as two hexadecimal digits, `comp` is also a single byte expressed as two hexadecimal digits, and `addr` is a memory address in the emulated console, expressed as however many hexadecimal digits are required for the console in question (typically 4 for 8-bit CPUs, 6 for 16-bit CPUs, and 8 for 32-bit CPUs). For compatibility with older versions of higan, the older syntaxes of `addr/data` and `addr/comp/data` are still supported. For cheats that require more than a single-byte change, higan allows multiple codes to be combined with `+` so that all of them can have a single description and be toggled with a single click. For example, in Super Mario World, you can lock the time to 999 with these codes: `7e0f31=09+7e0f32=09+7e0f33=09`. Changes made in the Cheat Editor are saved to disk when the game is unloaded, or when higan exits. higan stores the known cheats for a particular game in `higan/cheats.bml` inside the corresponding game folder in [the Game Library](#the-game-library). If your copy of higan includes a cheat database (a file named `cheats.bml` in the same directory as `Super Famicom.sys` and the other `*.sys` directories), you can click the "Find Codes ..." button in the bottom left to load all known cheats for the currently-running game. To add a new cheat, select an unused row in the list, then type the relevant codes in the "Code(s)" field at the bottom, and a description in the "Description" field. To enable or disable an existing cheat, tick the checkbox in the first column of the list. The code should take effect immediately. To clear out an existing cheat, select it from the list and click the "Erase" button in the bottom right, or just manually delete the contents of the "Code(s)" and "Description" fields. To clear out all existing cheats, click the "Reset" button in the bottom right. The State Manager ----------------- The State Manager allows you to create, load, and remove Manager states. For more information on Manager states, quick states, saved games and how they compare, see [Save States](#save-states). To create a new manager state, or to replace an existing one, select the slot in the list then click "Save" in the bottom-left corner. You can then type a description in the "Description" field, to help you find the state again later. To rename a state, select the slot in the list and edit the "Description" field. To load a state, select the slot in the list and click "Load" in the bottom-left corner, or just double-click it. To clear the state out of a slot, select the slot in the list and click "Erase" in the bottom-right corner. To clear all the slots at once, click "Reset" in the bottom-right corner. The Manifest Viewer ------------------- As mentioned in [Why game folders?](#why-game-folders), a game cartridge contains more than just the raw data of the game. higan uses a "manifest" to describe how the various parts of a game cartridge are wired up together, and the Manifest Viewer lets you examine the configuration higan is using for the currently-running game. For some games, an actual cartridge has been taken apart and carefully examined and its configuration has been recorded in icarus' database, so the manifest icarus produces is guaranteed accurate. For games that do not exist in icarus' database, icarus will make a reasonable guess. This is enough to get the game running, but does not necessarily reflect the original cartridge. The Filesystem Browser ---------------------- Sometimes higan will need to ask you to choose a file or folder. For this, it uses a special Filesystem Browser dialog. Although many operating systems provide a native filesystem browser, they do not all allow the same customizations. Therefore, higan provides its own filesystem browser that works the same way on every platform. The filesystem browser shows the contents of some particular folder, and allows you to select one of those items. Across the top of the window, a text-box displays the path of the current folder. If you want to browse a specific path, you may edit the contents of this box and press Enter to switch to the new location. The button with two blue arrows at the top-right is "Refresh". Pressing this button will check for added (or removed) items in the current folder, and add (or remove) them to (or from) the list. The button with the house at the top-right is "Home". Pressing this button will switch to your home folder. The button with the green up-arrow at the top right is "Parent". Pressing this button will switch to the parent of the current folder. Most of the filesystem browser lists the contents of the current directory. Double-clicking a folder, or selecting it and pressing Enter, will switch to showing the contents of that directory. If the list has keyboard focus, typing any text will jump to the first inem in the list whose name begins with the text you typed. If a drop-down list appears in the bottom-left, it allows you to choose which files appear in the list, based on file-extension. If this filesystem browser is asking for a file, you can choose one by double-clicking it, by selecting it and pressing Enter, or by selecting it and clicking the "Select" button in the bottom-right. If this filesystem browser is asking for a directory, you can choose one by selecting it and clicking the "Select" button in the bottom-right. Double-clicking or selecting and pressing Enter don't work, they just switch to viewing that directory. The "Cancel" button in the bottom-right closes the file-system browser without selecting anything. The icarus interface -------------------- When launching icarus, directly or by picking "Import ROM Files ..." from higan's [Library menu](#the-library-menu), the main icarus window appears. This is [a filesystem browser](#the-filesystem-browser), with customisations: - The filesystem browser only lists files with extensions typically used for ROM dumps from consoles higan emulates, plus `.zip` files since ROM dumps are often compressed. - Each matching file has a check-box next to it. - You can tick the check-box next to every file at once by pressing "Select All" in the bottom-left. - You can un-tick all the check-boxes by pressing "Unselect All" in the bottom-left. Pressing "Settings ..." in the bottom-right opens [the icarus Settings dialog](#the-icarus-settings-dialog). Pressing "Import ..." in the bottom-right will close the filesystem browser then try to import all the files whose check-boxes are ticked into [the Game Library](#the-game-library). icarus displays a progress dialog during the import process. **Note:** Some games require extra steps to import correctly; see [the Game Library](#the-game-library) for details. The icarus Settings dialog -------------------------- The icarus Settings dialog contains the following settings: - **Library Location** determines where icarus puts the games it imports. See [Moving the Game Library](#moving-the-game-library) for details. - **Create Manifests** causes icarus to write out a manifest file describing each imported game to that game's [game folder](#whats-in-a-game-folder). This means that higan doesn't have to regenerate the manifest each time an imported game is loaded, but it means that a future version of higan with an incompatible manifest format may be unable to play these games. Note that higan also has an "Ignore Manifests" option in the Advanced tab of [its Configuration dialog](#the-configuration-dialog). - **Use Database** causes icarus to use manifest information from its database of known-good manifests, if it's importing a game it recognises. For unrecognised games, and for all games if this box is unticked, icarus gueses the manifest data. This option is still relevant when "Create Manifests" is unticked: higan uses icarus to generate a manifest when a game is loaded, not just at import-time. The Game Library ================ higan maintains a "game library" containing all the games you've played. - In Windows, the default location of the game library is the `Emulation` folder inside your profile folder (To find your profile folder, press `Win+R` to open the Run dialog, then type `%USERPROFILE%` and press Enter). - In Linux, the default location of the game library is the `Emulation` directory inside your home directory. - On all platforms, the game library location can be configured. See [Moving the Game Library](#moving-the-game-library) below. Inside the library directory there is a subdirectory for each system, and inside each system directory are the game folders for each imported game. For more information about game folders, see [Why game folders?](#why-game-folders) and [What's in a game folder?](#whats-in-a-game-folder) below. Importing and playing regular games ----------------------------------- icarus supports importing games in the most commonly-used formats for each supported console, and also those same formats inside `.zip` files. More advanced compression formats like RAR or 7-zip are not supported. For most games that do not use special chips or co-processors, importing a game is straight-forward. From [the Library menu](#the-library-menu) choose "Load ROM File ..." to open [a filesystem browser](#the-filesystem-browser), choose the game you want to play, and it will be imported into the library and loaded. To play the game again select the console the game runs on from [the Library menu](#the-library-menu) to open another [filesystem browser](#the-filesystem-browser) that lists all the previously-imported games for that platform. Importing and playing games with co-processor firmware ------------------------------------------------------ Many games included extra chips inside the game cartridge, to provide enhanced capabilities of one kind or another. Sometimes, those extra chips were separate CPUs running their own separate firmware, and for those cases higan requires a copy of the co-processor firmware as well as the actual game. Unfortunately, like games themselves, co-processor firmware cannot legally be distributed, so you'll need to obtain copies of the relevant firmware data yourself. To import a game that requires co-processor firmware, you must copy the required firmware files beside the game you want to import. For example, if you want to import Megaman X2, which is stored in the file `mmx2.sfc`, the file `cx4.data.rom` must be placed in the same folder for the import to succeed. Wikipedia [lists which Super Famicom games use which co-processors][wpec], although not all co-processors require separate firmware. Once you've figured out which co-processor (if any) is used by the game you want to import, here's the firmware files you'll need: [wpec]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Super_NES_enhancement_chips#List_of_Super_NES_games_that_use_enhancement_chips
Co-processor | Filename | Size (bytes) | SHA256 |
---|---|---|---|
CX4 | cx4.data.rom |
3072 | ae8d4d1961b93421ff00b3caa1d0f0ce7783e749772a3369c36b3dbf0d37ef18 |
DSP1/1A See Note 1 |
dsp1.data.rom |
2048 | 0b5da6533e55852ee8fc397977ec5576c5b9f1fb2e05656d8f87123a121b076e |
dsp1.program.rom |
6144 | 269584b347a22953a2989494c850a7c1c027f4ca5add517a60e0c7d8833d0fac |
|
DSP1B See Note 2 |
dsp1b.data.rom |
2048 | 8546cbac530830446bb8a277f6b139d4ad64d650bdbac7e4e150e2f095665049 |
dsp1b.program.rom |
6144 | 2eccb54a8f89374911f7e2db48f1b4cde855655e28103f7bda2982a5b418a187 |
|
DSP2 | dsp2.data.rom |
2048 | 3beef9bffdc1e84c9f99f3301d8bd3e520d2e62909a995320f9faeae8f46ec11 |
dsp2.program.rom |
6144 | 62a2ef8d2d7db638f4ec0fbcebf0e5bf18a75ee95be06e885d9519a10487f0da |
|
DSP3 | dsp3.data.rom |
2048 | 7fe51796e9c97fee1fa2aab40592b7c78997f67dd00333e69d0f79a12f3cb69f |
dsp3.program.rom |
6144 | aea7b622e7c1de346cb15d16afcbedf92b6798507e179f83ed2a4cff40d0e663 |
|
DSP4 | dsp4.data.rom |
2048 | ef3ffb4256dd896a60213269b4e2d3bdd120c97e2fd623bddabbf43c2be422af |
dsp4.program.rom |
6144 | 89b1826e6038be3a0ea0f923e85d589ff6f02dc1a1819fb2ec8c0cea5b333dcd |
|
ST010 | st010.data.rom |
4096 | dc7056a51b53993d7a8ba5bacf9501f785d2fce5e5be748e9ff2737c5938d4a5 |
st010.program.rom |
49152 | 2c1f74bb5f466d81c64c326e71ac054489efe1abc9a5d6f91aac7747f2ddab67 |
|
ST011 | st011.data.rom |
4096 | b5377d1bebe8adc507a024b6e2b9b8fdf4877e451da84fbad05dff4e4a70311e |
st011.program.rom |
49152 | d90a5cda380e81cb9ba11a9da7539b173c49b31bedc7a3ac9c3c8b3f97e89e14 |
|
ST018 | st018.data.rom |
32768 | b5377d1bebe8adc507a024b6e2b9b8fdf4877e451da84fbad05dff4e4a70311e |
st018.program.rom |
131072 | d90a5cda380e81cb9ba11a9da7539b173c49b31bedc7a3ac9c3c8b3f97e89e14 |
Cartridge | Filename | Size (bytes) | SHA256 |
---|---|---|---|
SGB | sgb.boot.rom |
256 | 0e4ddff32fc9d1eeaae812a157dd246459b00c9e14f2f61751f661f32361e360 |
SGB2 | sgb.boot.rom |
256 | fd243c4fb27008986316ce3df29e9cfbcdc0cd52704970555a8bb76edbec3988 |