
If you have a Nintendo Wii console, you have that wired bar that goes on the top of your TV as a signal to the “Wiimote” controllers of where the TV is. … But, how was I going to emulate a sensor bar? 😅 Figuring out how to emulate a “sensor bar” for the Wiimote controller(s) To try, all I needed was a Wii game, a “Wiimote” controller, and a sensor bar. Since my MacBook Pro is fairly new, I'd hoped that it packed enough processing and graphics power to play. Soon after, I discovered that there's a software emulator that can perfectly emulate both of these Nintendo consoles on most Macs and PCs! Screenshot of “ The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker” running on a Nintendo GameCube console. The fact that I had been able to play a GameCube game on the Wii was a signal that the two were very similar, hardware-wise. … A new Zelda game had come out since then, called “ The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword,” and I had been dying to play it.



The primary reason that I'm going with the PlayStation 4 over the Xbox One is that I've owned the PlayStation 2 and PlayStation 3 previously.

There are a few other titles that I'm looking forward to this holiday season when PlayStation 4 goes on sale, such as The Last Of Us and Grand Theft Auto 5… but, even though these are also PlayStation 3 titles, I don't own that console anymore either, so I can't play either of them right now. Wouldn't it be great to be able to play Zelda on your laptop? … Obviously! 😄 Between video-game consolesīeing that I'm between travels, apartments, and dedication to a specific game console, I decided to get creative with hardware and catch up on the Legend of Zelda series developed by Nintendo.
