Emucr-yuzu-windows-msvc-20221128-fbdfe98c7.7z Page
This specific build arrived during a "Golden Era" for the emulator. By late 2022, yuzu had achieved massive performance leaps:
At the time this file was created, was the world's leading open-source Nintendo Switch emulator. Developed by the same team behind Citra (a 3DS emulator), it was written in C++. The "msvc-20221128" part of the filename tells us this specific version was built using Microsoft Visual C++ 2022 , which was the standard environment for running yuzu on Windows. 3. The Date: November 28, 2022 EmuCR-yuzu-windows-msvc-20221128-fbdfe98c7.7z
: Pokémon Scarlet and Violet had been released only 10 days prior (November 18, 2022). Emulation fans were scouring sites like EmuCR for builds exactly like this one, hoping for "Day 1" fixes for the graphical glitches and performance issues that plagued the game on original hardware. This specific build arrived during a "Golden Era"
: By this point, major features like the "Vulkan" graphics API and "High-Level Emulation" of the Switch's OS were mature, meaning this build likely ran most major titles (like Breath of the Wild or Super Mario Odyssey ) at 60 FPS on mid-range PCs. 4. Why this file is "History" The "msvc-20221128" part of the filename tells us
Old 7z archives like this one—stored on mirrors and third-party sites like EmuCR—became the only way for preservationists to track how the software evolved. It represents a moment when the community was working at lightning speed to perfect emulation for a console that was still at the height of its popularity.
If you find this file today, it is a digital artifact. In , the yuzu project was officially shut down following a legal settlement with Nintendo. The official websites and GitHub repositories were taken offline.
The file represents a specific "snapshot" in the history of Nintendo Switch emulation. To understand its "story," you have to look at the three main parts of its name: EmuCR , yuzu , and the timestamp . 1. The Creator: EmuCR