In short, PS3’s CELL microprocessor had some very unique capabilities, which meant that developers over-relied on the CPU at the time. This approach ultimately makes PS3 games harder to emulate
Once the extraction is done, open the emulator and you can either drag and drop the firmware file in the emulator window or click File -> Install Firmware and select the file directly. It can take a few minutes for the firmware to finish installing depending on your system. To set up Demon's Souls, if you have the disc version, click File-> Add
Compatibility list developed and maintained by AniLeo - Page loaded in 163.77ms. RPCS3 is a multi-platform open-source Sony PlayStation 3 emulator and debugger written in C++ for Windows, Linux, macOS and FreeBSD made possible with the power of reverse engineering.
PS3 emulation has made some major strides recently but it's still far away from prime time imo. Most games run bad / have major issues even on powerful hardware. Many just don't work period. There's a few that run great and you can blow away the original ps3 experience with but it's few and far between imo.
I have also Searched a lot for a PS3 Emulator. Here is what i found out: 1.Most of the PS3 emulators are SCAMS i.e they make u do a "survey" that supposedly unlocks the RAR "password" 2. I have read that the Architecture running on the PS3 is waaay diffrent from that of PC , and therefore , u need a VERY powerful PC to run it.Suffice it to say, the ability to catalogue, futureproof and experience the breadth of titles throughout gaming history on an open platform, usually an x86 PC (though increasingly also platforms like ARM), is most likely the leading use case of emulation. Looking at the progress in recent years of emulators such as Xenia and RPCS3 has gotten me 63RIqiA.