One day post-launch, the developers of Switch emulator Yuzu announce that Tears of the Kingdom is playable ‘full speed on most hardware’ with ‘no hacks needed’

A lightning-quick turnaround on one of the biggest releases of the year.

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While the release of Nintendo’s follow up to Breath of the Wild has been exciting enough on its own, its saga in the emulation and modding scene has beenan absolute rollercoaster. On May 13, one day after Tears of the Kingdom’s official launch, the developers of Switch emulator Yuzuannouncedthat the game is fully playable, with native Switch-level performance attainable on “most” modern hardware, with resolutions in excess of its original 900p accessible with no external hacks required⁠—just the emulator and your own legally-dumped copy of TotK.

Hey! Listen! Wait, wrong game📣 Attention All 📣🔥 Tears of the Kingdom is playable in yuzu🚀 Full speed on most hardware!✨ Experience in 4K or higher!🚫 No hacks needed!🎁 60fps, cheats, & more with modsExperience the best way to play, today:https://t.co/cmwPNpop7G pic.twitter.com/SBmpsqE9chMay 13, 2023

Yuzu’s announcement also mentions “60fps, cheats, & more with mods,” and that’s where things do get a bit hairier. At the time of writing, it still appears thatthe only TotK 60fps patch is the one hosted on the NewYuzuPiracy subreddit. If the name didn’t clue you in, this is a very, ahem,laissez fairecommunity with no official connection to the developers of Yuzu, and that 60fps patch is almost certainly based on the Tears of the Kingdom leak from a few weeks ago.

Yuzu’s own mod pagedoes not yet list any projects for Tears of the Kingdom, so if you’re trying to stay on the right-hand path, you’ll want to stick with the resolution and framerate stability improvements over native Switch offered by the emulator itself. As reported by my colleague, PCG senior editor Wes Fenlon, for all the excitement around Switch emulation and the massive performance and graphical gains to be had over the original hardware, the tumult around Nintendo’s biggest release since 2020’s Animal Crossing: New Horizons has beenone hell of a headache.

A full build ofTears of the Kingdom leaked weeks early, and Nintendo responded byDMCA-ing the popular Lockpick toolfor dumping Switch game decryption keys for use in emulators. The developers of an in-progress Switch emulator for Android, Skyline, abandoned work on their project for fear of legal repercussions, and curious sorts who wanted to dip into TotK and potential mods early via piracy were met with a minefield of malware.

All of that unpleasantness aside, you can now legally dump your own copy of Tears of the Kingdom to play on PC with equal or greater performance to the original Switch on a wide range of hardware⁠—onr/pcgaming, I’m seeing users report rock-solid framerates beyond 1080p resolution on 30-series graphics cards. The other major Switch emulation project, Ryujinx, looks to be roughly on par with Yuzu—this video from YouTuberKyoKatshows TotK running at a fairly solid 1440p 30fps on the positivelyancientGTX 1060 mid-range GPU. Meanwhile, I’m probably going to stick to playing it on my dinky, 2017, OG Switch⁠—resolution be damned, I just love the form factor.

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Ted has been thinking about PC games and bothering anyone who would listen with his thoughts on them ever since he booted up his sister’s copy of Neverwinter Nights on the family computer. He is obsessed with all things CRPG and CRPG-adjacent, but has also covered esports, modding, and rare game collecting. When he’s not playing or writing about games, you can find Ted lifting weights on his back porch.

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