
The video starts off with footage on the Sand Kingdom, where viewers can see that everything runs faster, including Mario himself. A video displaying gameplay from Super Mario Odyssey running via the PC emulator can be seen below. The Nintendo Switch emulator for PC known as the Yuzu emulator has increased the game’s frame rate to 60 fps. However, this hasn’t stopped some from trying to improve its performance even further. Super Mario Odyssey ran well in the first place on its native console. While the game played well and ran smoothly to begin with, an emulation team has managed to get Super Mario Odyssey up and running on PC at 60 frames-per-second.

Since the Nintendo Switch’s inception, Super Mario Odyssey has become one of the console’s standout releases and one of the standout 3D mainline Mario games.

You Are Reading : Super Mario Odyssey Can Be Played On The PC At 60 FPS The Yuzu emulator put on a great display of running Super Mario Odyssey and other Nintendo Switch hits at 60 fps on PC. You can join the discussion on the Yuzu Switch Emulator being able to play Super Mario Odyssey on PC on the OC3D Forums.Super Mario Odyssey Can Be Played On The PC – At 60 FPS Right now, Yuzu offers support for both game DLC and Amiibo, both of which are major steps towards providing the full Switch experience on the PC platform. With Super Mario Odyssey being playable on Yuzu, it seems like it will only be a matter to time before more games are playable on the emulator. Even discounting the emulator's graphical bugs, Yuzu is currently not fast enough to act as a Switch replacement. For reference, Super Mario Odyssey runs with a 60FPS target on Switch. In the video below, BSoD Gaming proved that Yuzu was able to play Super Mario Odyssey, but also confirmed that the emulator could not offer the same performance levels as a Nintendo Switch, with a GTX 1080 Ti and an overclocked i7-8700K offering framerates that were typically in the 40s.

Right now, the best place to play Nintendo Switch games is on the console itself, something which could be said for any of today's consoles. Even so, this is an insane amount of progress for an emulator that is less than a year old. Now, less than a year later, the emulator can no play one of the Switch's most popular games, Super Mario Odyssey, from start to finish, albeit with both performance issues and a range of glitches. Back in January, the Yuzu emulator was revealed to the world, a project which planned to develop an open-source Nintendo Switch emulator which would make all of that platform's games playable on PC.Īt the start, Yuzu was a work-in-progress tool, offering little more than the ability to boot certain games on PC.
