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ProjectPSX

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ProjectPSX is a C# coded emulator of the original Sony Playstation (Playstation 1/PS1/PSX)

This is a personal project with the scope to learn about hardware and the development of emulators.

ProjectPSX dosn't use any external dependency and uses rather simplistic C# code.

At the moment the following is implemented:

What is not implemented (but should be...):

Note: A valid PlayStation Bios is needed to run the emulator. SCPH1001.BIN is the default bios on the development but some others like SCPH5501 or SCPH7001 have been reported to work.

Compatibility

There's no compatibility list. Many games boot and go ingame althought some may have random problems. Some of the games I tested that woked were: Ridge Racer, Castlevania Symphony of the Night, Final Fantasy 7, Crash Bandicoot 1, 2 and 3, Spyro the dragon, Tekken 1, 2 and 3, Toshinden, Time Crisis, Tobal 1 and 2, Vagrant Story, Street Fighter Zero 3, Rockman/Megaman 8/X4, Parasite Eve, Metal Gear Solid, Crash Team Racing... Some others like Final Fantasy IX, Gran Turismo, Resident Evil 3 or Marvel vs Capcom boot but have random problems to be fixed.

Note: Memory Card files are hardcoded to "memcard.mcr" on the root directory. If there's no one a new one will be generated on save.

Using the emulator

ProjectPSX core itself is a headless library with no dependencies. The solution comes with 2 additional projects ProjectPSX.Winforms and ProjectPSX.OpenTK. The Winforms project uses NAudio to output sound.

When using the Winform project a file dialog will prompt on execution. Select a Bin file (use track1) or a Cue file to generate CD tracks to feed the CDROM.

When using the OpenTK project just drag and drop a bin/cue file to the window.

The bios and expansion files are hardcoded on the BUS class.

Once power on, Input is mapped as:

Screenshots

<p align="center" width="100%"> <img width="45%" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/28767885/109383794-2cd80600-78e9-11eb-9093-d88d79751698.PNG"> <img width="45%" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/28767885/109383797-2fd2f680-78e9-11eb-931e-de2d328175ee.PNG"> </p>

crash rr ff7 ff7B

Quick Faq

Yes you can, but you shouldn't. There are a lot of other more capable emulators out there. This is a work in progress personal project with the aim to learn about emulators and hardware implementation. It can and will break during emulation as there are a lot of unimplemented hardware features.

It's the VRAM viewer. It includes all the textures, color lockup tables and display buffers used by the playstation software. It's used for debugging purposes. You can toggle it by pressing TAB on your keyboard.

Probably due to not implemented hardware or incorrect implemented one, mainly cdrom/dma/mdec timmings.

Uncomment the bios.verbose() or TTY() functions on the CPU main loop. You can also dissasemble() the MIPS CPU instructions and printRegs() on the current opcode.

I have been interested in emulating hardware for some time. I started doing a Java Chip8 and a C# Intel 8080 CPU (used on the classic arcade Space Invaders). Some later i did Nintendo Gameboy. I wanted to keep forward to do some 3D so i ended with the PSX as it had a good library of games...

I mainly used Martin Korth PSX-SPX documentation about the Playstation hardware at https://problemkaputt.de/psx-spx.htm Also the people at the #playstation channel on the emudev discord at https://discord.gg/dkmJAes was very helpful.

Winforms was the easiest way to have output for me as it was fast prototyped. At the moment the UI is detached from the core so any windowing system can be added as long as the IHostWindow interface is implemented. There's also am OpenTK project on the solution that runs on Linux.

At the start of this project I was a guy with a boring job unrelated to coding. I did'nt want to do it for the rest of my life so I started studying to try to change careers. Eventually learned (a bit) and started to code whatever made me happy. Eventually got a job as an Android Dev...