MSX emulators

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MSX
Developer ASCII Corporation
Manufacturer National, Sony, Pioneer, Panasonic, Samsung, Sharp, Philips, Canon, Yamaha, Toshiba, Mitsubishi, Sanyo, JVC, Fujitsu, Spectravideo, GoldStar, Hitachi, Kyocera, Yashica, Daewoo, Dragon MSX, Casio
Type Home computer
Release date October 21, 1983 (MSX)
Discontinued 1993 (MSX turboR)
Emulated βœ“
For emulators that run on the MSX, see Emulators on MSX.

MSX is a Z80-based family of home computers, designed by Microsoft in cooperation with ASCII Corporation, which appeared in 1983. They were popular in Asian, South American and European countries as well as the former Soviet Union, but are virtually unknown in North America.

MSX software came on a variety of media, including cassette tapes, 3.5" floppy disks, ROM cartridges, and even LaserDiscs. Only ROM cartridges are preserved on the No-Intro set for now. You'll also need an extensive BIOS ROM pack, though if you're using the blueMSX core in RetroArch, you'll only need four of them. There are game manager tools to help with configuring which BIOS and games come with which feature. The Japanese Wii Virtual Console also included basic MSX 2 emulation.

Emulators

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Name Platform(s) Latest version Hardware variants Accuracy libretro RetroAchievements License Active Compatibility Recommended
x86
openMSX Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD 21.0 βœ“ Cycle βœ— βœ— GPLv2 (Copyleft) βœ“ βœ“
blueMSX
blueMSX_libretro
Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD [N 1] 2.8.2
libretro core
βœ“ Cycle βœ“ βœ“ BSD-3-Clause
GPLv2
~[N 2] βœ“
MAME Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD git artifacts[N 3]
0.288
libretro core[N 4]
~ High βœ“ βœ— GPLv2
BSD-3-Clause
βœ“ βœ“
fMSX
fMSX_libretro
Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD 6.0
libretro core
~ Mid βœ“ βœ“ Non-commercial βœ“ ~
Retro Virtual Machine Windows Linux macOS 2.1.16 βœ— ? βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ“ TBD
WebMSX Web git βœ“ High βœ— βœ— ? βœ— ~
Emulicious Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD 2026-03-19 ? ? βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ“ βœ—
ares Windows Linux macOS git Artifacts
v148
~ ? βœ— roadmap ISC (Permissive) βœ“ 73.31%
519 out of 708 reported titles.
βœ—
higan (火眼)
byuu (謬/view)
Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD v110 ~ ? βœ— βœ— GPLv3 (Copyleft) βœ— βœ—
CLK Linux macOS FreeBSD 2026-05-28 ~ Cycle βœ— βœ— MIT (Permissive) βœ“ βœ—
BizHawk Windows Linux 2.11.1 ? ? ? ? MIT
GPL
βœ“ ? ?
Pantheon Windows 16.154 ~ High βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ“ βœ—
MSXPLAYer
(fMSX based)
Windows MSX Game Reader
(Commercial)
~ Mid βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ— βœ—
DarcNES Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD 9b0401/9b0313 βœ— Low βœ— βœ— Non-commercial βœ— βœ—
MSXEC Windows 20240830 ~ ? βœ— βœ— ? βœ“ TBD
ZEsarUX Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD UNIX Haiku MorphOS 13.0-Beta2 βœ— ? βœ— βœ— GPL (Copyleft) βœ“ ?
RuMSX Windows 0.84 ? ? ? ? ? βœ— ?
ARM
openMSX Android 0.15.0 βœ“ Cycle βœ— βœ— GPLv2 (Copyleft) βœ— βœ“
blueMSX_libretro Android iOS libretro core βœ“ Cycle βœ“ βœ“ GPLv2 (Copyleft) ~[N 2] βœ“
fMSX_libretro Android iOS libretro core ~ Mid βœ“ βœ“ Non-commercial βœ“ βœ“
MSX.emu Android iOS Linux
webOS Pandora Dragonbox Pyra
1.5.84
1.5.46.02 PyraBuild 16 Pandora
βœ“ High βœ— βœ— GPLv3 (Copyleft) βœ“ βœ“
ares Windows on ARM git Artifacts
v148
? ? ? ? ISC (Permissive) βœ“ 73.31%
519 out of 708 reported titles.
?
ZEsarUX Linux ARM macOS Pandora 13.0-Beta2 βœ— ? βœ— βœ— GPL (Copyleft) βœ“ ?
Consoles
blueMSX_libretro Xbox One Xbox Series X/S libretro core βœ“ Cycle βœ“ GPLv2 (Copyleft) βœ“ ~[N 2] βœ“
fMSX_libretro Xbox One Xbox Series X/S libretro core ~ Mid βœ“ βœ“ Non-commercial βœ“ βœ“
fMSX PSP PSP 5.4.2
git
~ Mid βœ— βœ— Non-commercial βœ— βœ“
PSPMSX PSP 1.5.1 ~ Mid βœ— βœ— ? βœ— βœ“
MiiSX Wii 0.4 ~ ? βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ— βœ“
BlueMSXbox Xbox v8 ~ ? βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ— βœ“
msxDS Nintendo DS 0.94 ~ ? βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ— βœ“
MSXAdvance Game Boy Advance 0.4 βœ— Low βœ— βœ— ? βœ— βœ—
DreamMSX DC Dreamcast 0.2g ~ ? βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ— βœ—
UltraMSX2 Nintendo 64 1.0 ~ ? βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ— βœ—
Virtual Console Wii N/A ~ ? βœ— βœ— Proprietary βœ— ?
  1. ↑ Only available outside of Windows as a libretro core (e.g. RetroArch).
  2. ↑ Jump up to: 2.0 2.1 2.2 Libretro core is still active.
  3. ↑ CI-Windows CI-Linux CI-Macos
  4. ↑ As 0.251, 0.139 (2010), 0.78 (2003), 0.37b5 (2000)

You may also want to check out Takeda Toshiya's website for emulators of many old Japanese computer systems (see the Download section of the Common Source Code Project). Includes yayaMSX1, yayaMSX2, yayaMSX2+ (MSX/MSX2/MSX2+ emulators by Mr.tanam and Mr.umaiboux), yayaFS-A1 (by Mr.umaiboux) and ePX-7. Emu-France also has a bunch of Takeda's emulators mirrored. Their downloads are smaller than Takeda's own releases.

Comparisons

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openMSX
In recent years, it surpassed blueMSX in terms of accuracy and hardware support. It's also the only MSX emulator that supports Palcom LaserDisc games.
blueMSX
An inactive open source project with cycle accuracy and, thus, very high compatibility. It is also available as a libretro core.
WebMSX
An HTML5 emulator written in JavaScript by Paulo Peccin (ppeccin).[1] It can be installed as a web app on iOS/Android/Desktop, and run offline. It has customizable touch controls and a virtual keyboard for mobile usage, and netplay support for multiplayer games. A more extensive list of features can be found at its GitHub page.
MSXPLAYer
A commercial emulator from the early 2000s that was also distributed through magazines and hardware.[2] Its most recent version was accompanied with the MSX Game Reader produced between 2004 and 2005. The accuracy of its MSX 1 emulation was only above average, but it had surprisingly good TurboR accuracy.[3]
MSX.emu
Uses blueMSX's emulation backend and built on top of the developer's Imagine engine used in all his applications. It emulates the MSX range and ColecoVision. Most MSX games should run, and audio can be good. Sega SG-1000 support is planned in the future. Contact the developer for the Cydia store version on iOS.

Hardware Variants

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Only recommended emulators added to this table.
Name Platform(s) Latest version Generations Specific Models
MSX 2 MSX 2+ TurboR Pioneer
Palcom PX-7
Panasonic
FS-A1
Panasonic
FS-A1FX
Panasonic
FS-A1WX
x86
openMSX Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD 20.0 βœ“  βœ“  βœ“  ? ? ? ?
blueMSX
blueMSX_libretro
Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD [N2 1] 2.8.2
libretro core
βœ“  βœ“  βœ“  ? ? ? ?
MAME Windows Linux macOS FreeBSD git artifacts[N2 2]
0.288
libretro core[N2 3]
βœ“  βœ“  ? ? ? ?
ares Windows Linux macOS v148 βœ“ ? ? ? ? ? ?
ARM
openMSX Android 0.15.0 βœ“  βœ“ βœ“  ? ? ? ?
blueMSX_libretro Android iOS libretro core βœ“  βœ“  βœ“  ? ? ? ?
fMSX_libretro Android iOS libretro core βœ“  βœ“  βœ—  ? ? ? ?
MSX.emu Android iOS Linux
webOS Pandora Dragonbox Pyra
1.5.84
1.5.46.02 PyraBuild 16 Pandora
βœ“  βœ“  βœ“  ? ? ? ?
Consoles
blueMSX_libretro Xbox One Xbox Series X/S libretro core βœ“  βœ“  βœ“  ? ? ? ?
fMSX_libretro Xbox One Xbox Series X/S libretro core βœ“  βœ“  βœ—  ? ? ? ?
fMSX PSP PSP 5.4.2
git
βœ“ βœ“  βœ— ? ? ? ?
PSPMSX PSP 1.5.1 βœ“ βœ“  βœ— ? ? ? ?
MiiSX Wii 0.4 βœ“ βœ“  βœ— ? ? ? ?
BlueMSXbox Xbox v8 βœ“  βœ“  βœ—  ? ? ? ?
msxDS Nintendo DS 0.94 βœ“  βœ“  βœ—  ? ? ? ?
  1. ↑ Only available outside of Windows as a libretro core (e.g. RetroArch).
  2. ↑ CI-Windows CI-Linux CI-Macos
  3. ↑ As 0.251, 0.139 (2010), 0.78 (2003), 0.37b5 (2000)

Generations

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There were multiple revisions to the MSX standard, reflected in greater or lesser support by emulators:

  • the MSX 1 is the original 1983 machine, with a 3.58Mhz Z80, an AY 3-8910 sound chip, and a TMS video processor β€” it offers resolutions up to 256x192 with attribute-based colours, single-colour sprites and no hardware scrolling. This machine primarily differs from contemporaries such as the ColecoVision and Sega SC-3000 only in its sound chip;
  • the MSX 2 is a 1985 revision that significantly upgrades the video processor; the maximum resolution is now 512x212, sprites are up to 16 colour, hardware vertical scrolling is available, more normative bitmap and non-attribute-based tile colour modes are offered, and primitive graphics acceleration is available β€” the video processor can independently perform tasks such as drawing lines and filling rectangles. Unlike the TMS chip in the MSX 1, no other machines use this video processor, so MSX 2 emulation is attempted less often than MSX 1 emulation;
  • the MSX 2+ is a minor revision from 1988 that adds hardware support for horizontal scrolling and a few extra colour modes; some 2+ models offer an optional modest speed improvement to the Z80 to 5.37Mhz;
  • the TurboR from 1990 offers the R800 processor as an alternative to the Z80, which is an offspring of the Z800, offering Z80 backwards compatibility with significantly increased throughput.

Commercial software overwhelmingly targets the MSX 1 or MSX 2 standards, with some able to benefit from the improved horizontal scrolling of the MSX 2+. Neither the 2+ nor the TurboR sold in substantial volumes, and a proposed MSX 3 standard never reached consumers.

Specific models

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Main article: Manufacturers list (Wikipedia)

MSX machines were manufactured by a wide range of companies including Pioneer, Panasonic, Sharp, Sony, Sanyo, Philips and LG Goldstar. Some of the notable machines include:

  • the Pioneer Palcom PX-7, an MSX1 computer aimed at the Japanese market. It was meant for attaching to a LaserDisc player, and as such has Superimpose capabilities (putting pictures and texts above the Laser Disc image). The PSG sound is stereo, contrary to almost all MSX machines. Pioneer also sold the ER-101 interface (Laser Vision) unit which made it possible for all MSX computers to have the same functionalities as the Palcom PX-7;
  • Panasonic's FS-A1 (1986), FS-A1mkII (W/ added keypad) and its Italian counterpart, the Toshiba FS-TM1 were based on the MSX2 standard; and
  • Panasonic's FS-A1FX (1988) and FS-A1WX (W/ added MSX-MUSIC & a Japanese Word processor) are MSX 2+ derived hardware; the FS-A1WSX (1989) was the last MSX 2+ computer.

Resources

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References

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Microsoft(edit)