Now before I get into the tidbits of what all this is, let me talk a bit about emulators. (Photo from Wikimedia|Copyright Nintendo)
Like the GameBoy Advance here, I still can’t see would still want to use this when the SP and Micro are just leagues better. And so game emulation has persisted there since-with very little interest as the Xbox One console was and is not capable of running CPU-intensive applications that emulators tend to be. But on Xbox consoles, you can get around the Store and install your own applications via the Developer Mode function available. But the few that have made it to the Microsoft Store have been pulled down ever since the company made changes into their Terms of Service, banning the ability for developers to sell emulators via their storefront. For a few years now the Xbox One has been capable of running emulators. Sounds strange, but consider the following: Besides your backwards compatible Xbox One, Xbox 360, and Original Xbox titles, you now have access to a vast array of emulators that let you get back to games that are likely older than you. I love video games so much, I spent $500 on November 10th to play a bunch of old games.