![]() While Debug Mode is active, the player can perform certain actions while the game is paused. However, some Zones allow the player to place objects that are not found in normal gameplay, such as scrapped enemies. These lists usually include a general global set of items that can be placed in any zone (usually a Ring and a Super Ring monitor), the current Zone's Badniks, certain platforms, and other obstacles or scenery. The player may then activate and deactivate object placement mode, which replaces the player character with an item that can be freely moved around the stage with and can cycle through the list of placeable objects before placing them onto the level. Generally, the HUD changes to show the coordinates of the player's location in place of the score counter. Sonic the Hedgehog (1991), Sonic the Hedgehog 2, Sonic the Hedgehog CD, Sonic 3 & Knuckles, and Sonic Mania each have a Debug Mode that activates the same basic set of features. Sonic & All-Stars Racing Transformed Review Sonic Jam is a rare example of the "edit mode" term being used in western releases, as it was included in the Secret Card's cheat code list in the Sonic World feature. In Japan, earlier main game installments in the Sonic series used the term edit mode ( エディットモード, editto mōdo ?) in the game's internal coding, which was described as such in magazine publications and strategy guide books. Alternately, the name "Sonic Construction Set" is used to describe the feature in the Sonic the Hedgehog 1 & 2: Sega's Official Player's Guide book. The name was later fully implemented in Sonic Mania and its expansion Sonic Mania Plus. Later on, Sonic & Knuckles Collection and the Windows 95 version of Sonic the Hedgehog CD used the term "Debug Mode" in the games' internal coding. It’s a simulator, not an emulator, so you can’t install stuff, but at least this comes with games.The name "Debug Mode" originates from western publications and magazines covering Sonic the Hedgehog games, which described the cheat codes for unlocking the feature in the early 1990s. It lets you play old Windows games like Minesweeper, Solitaire, Spider Solitaire, and FreeCell. Win 98 Simulator (Windows 98) - Yes, this is real.It supports multiple file formats, game language switch support, and hardware controller support. ![]() NGP.emu (NeoGeo Pocket) - A NeoGeo Pocket emulator that works well.MAME Neo Arcade Emulator (NeoGeo) - The ads with this game aren’t great, but compatibility is good, and it’s one of the few competent NeoGeo emulators.It’s still in active development, and it’s quite buggy, but it could get better over time. EmuBox (multi-console emulator) - EmuBox is an okay multi-console emulator with support for a few different consoles.C64.emu (Commodore 64) - C64.emu is the only consistently updated Commodore 64 emulator and comes with plenty of features.It’s sleek, refined, and works well with every game we tried. 2600.emu (Atari 2600) - A reasonably good Atari 2600 emulator for playing classics like Pac-Man.It takes a minute to set up and learn how to use, but every emulator user should have it as it basically adds cloud-saving support to every emulator. This is an amazing app that lets you backup all of your save states, emulator files, etc, and then restore them on another device. ![]() It basically lets you take any folder on your phone and back it up to the cloud. ![]() We’d also like to give an honorable mention to Autosync by MetaCtrl ( Google Play). ![]()
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