Several PC games run on Snapdragon 8 Elite Android device with 16GB RAM and emulation — The Witcher 3, Spider-Man: Miles Morales, and Cyberpunk 2077 playable at 720p

ETA Prime PC Game Emulation on Android
(Image credit: YouTube - ETA Prime)

PC emulation is gathering steam within the Android ecosystem and has finally reached mainstream viability for many Android gamers. We recently covered a PC emulation piece in which a YouTuber ran a full-blown PC version of Cyberpunk 2077 on a flagship Android smartphone. ETA Prime has since published another video showing off several Android devices running several PC games, besides Cyberpunk 2077, using emulation. The video shows that PC emulation on Android is now viable for a wide variety of PC games, including some AAA titles (if your Android device has the performance chops to tackle it).

The YouTuber tested several PC games on various Android devices, including GTA V, Left 4 Dead 2, The Witcher 3, Spider-Man: Miles Morales, Marvel Cosmic Invasion, and Cyberpunk 2077 (again). For PC emulation, ETA Prime used GameHub and Game Native. The former can be found on the Google Play Store, but Game Native is an open-source app only available from the Game Native website or GitHub page.

YouTube YouTube
Watch On

On an AYN Odin 3, featuring a Snapdragon 8 Elite SoC and 16GB of RAM, the YouTuber tested Left 4 Dead 2 and Marvel Cosmic Invasion. Both games ran smoothly at 60 FPS with no noticeable dips. On a Lenovo Y700 Gen 4 Android tablet with the same SoC and 12GB of RAM, the YouTuber tested GTA V at 720p normal settings, and the game ran at just above 40 FPS.

Article continues below

Last but not least, the YouTuber tested three more games on the liquid-cooled Red Magic 11 Pro, which sports Qualcomm's latest Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 SoC and 16GB of RAM. In Spider-Man: Miles Morales, the Android phone achieved a near-steady 30 FPS with a frame rate lock at 720p on low settings, and FSR 3 upscaling set to Balanced. The DX9 version of Witcher 3 ran at 60 FPS with a frame rate cap at 720p low settings.

Finally, the YouTuber tested Cyberpunk 2077 again on the same phone, this time with better-tuned graphics settings. This time, the phone achieved over 60 FPS with frame generation enabled in the game. Previously, the phone could barely achieve 45-50 FPS with frame generation.

PC emulation on Android is nowhere near perfect, but it is now viable at least on high-end Android devices thanks to advancements in translation tech such as Valve's Proton compatibility layer. GameHub, for instance, uses a combination of Proton and FEX to translate x86 and Windows code into code that Android phones with ARM SoCs can execute.

Getting PC games to work on Android has also never been easier, as apps such as GameHub are available directly from the Google Play Store. GameHub requires no serious tinkering behind the scenes and comes with all the emulators needed to run PC games on Android. GameHub also has built-in Steam integration, making installing Steam games on Android devices a near-frictionless experience.

Google Preferred Source

Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.

Aaron Klotz
Contributing Writer

Aaron Klotz is a contributing writer for Tom’s Hardware, covering news related to computer hardware such as CPUs, and graphics cards.

  • Notton
    I think it should be pointed out that a Snapdragon 8/s Gen3/4/5 with 16GB RAM is not exactly cheap.
    We're looking at US$430~$460 for a Lenovo Y700 Gen4/16GB/512GB,
    US$450 for an Odin 3/16GB/512GB, and
    US$850~950 for a Red Magic 11 Pro 16GB/512GB.
    An optional detachable grip controller for the Y700 and Red Magic is anywhere from US$25 to US$100.
    A low cost option is something like a Gamesir X5 Lite, while the high end is something like a Razer Kishi Ultra.

    This is in comparison to an x86 handheld, such as a LeGoS Z1E/32GB/1TB/SteamOS, which is on sale for US$585 as of this writing.

    Now, if the games could do 720p/60fps on a Snapdragon 7+ Gen3, that's when I would start looking into the emulator more seriously.
    For reference, SD 7+ Gen3 is around 20 to 40% slower than an SD 8/s Gen3/4/5, but I can find them in tablets for relatively cheaply at around US$300 with a 12GB/256GB config.
    For example, Alldocube's iPlay 70 mini Ultra is basically a Lenovo Y700 Gen 2, but one that you don't have to go through hoops to buy outside of China.
    Reply
  • WrongRookie
    Notton said:
    I think it should be pointed out that a Snapdragon 8/s Gen3/4/5 with 16GB RAM is not exactly cheap.
    We're looking at US$430~$460 for a Lenovo Y700 Gen4/16GB/512GB,
    US$450 for an Odin 3/16GB/512GB, and
    US$850~950 for a Red Magic 11 Pro 16GB/512GB.
    An optional detachable grip controller for the Y700 and Red Magic is anywhere from US$25 to US$100.
    A low cost option is something like a Gamesir X5 Lite, while the high end is something like a Razer Kishi Ultra.

    This is in comparison to an x86 handheld, such as a LeGoS Z1E/32GB/1TB/SteamOS, which is on sale for US$585 as of this writing.

    Now, if the games could do 720p/60fps on a Snapdragon 7+ Gen3, that's when I would start looking into the emulator more seriously.
    For reference, SD 7+ Gen3 is around 20 to 40% slower than an SD 8/s Gen3/4/5, but I can find them in tablets for relatively cheaply at around US$300 with a 12GB/256GB config.
    For example, Alldocube's iPlay 70 mini Ultra is basically a Lenovo Y700 Gen 2, but one that you don't have to go through hoops to buy outside of China.

    What about Mediatek chipsets? Those major in the mid range prices.
    Reply
  • Notton
    WrongRookie said:
    What about Mediatek chipsets? Those major in the mid range prices.
    Sure, I guess?
    I really haven't looked into Mediatek powered gaming tablets because...
    1. Most of them come with a Helios G99 or G100, and it's challenging finding one with a Dimensity while remaining under US$350.
    2. MTK had video decode latency issues when streaming on moonlight/artemis, though that was last year when I was looking into a cheap gaming tablet so it may or may not be fixed by now.

    The best I could find...
    Headwolf FPad7 with MTK Dimensity 7050/8GB/512GB for around US$200
    Headwolf Titan 1 with MTK Dimensity 8300/12GB/256GB, US$300 but that's still at the kickstarter pledge phase.
    AyaNeo Pocket Play with MTK Dimensity 9300, but they haven't even started the kickstarter pledge phase for it.
    Vivo Pad 3 Pro, MTK Dimensity 9300/16GB/512GB, apparently around $520~$620, but unsure.
    Vivo pad 5, MTK Dimensity 9400/8GB/256GB for €570, 9400/16GB/512GB for €700

    And I gave up at that point
    Reply
  • WrongRookie
    Notton said:
    Sure, I guess?
    I really haven't looked into Mediatek powered gaming tablets because...
    1. Most of them come with a Helios G99 or G100, and it's challenging finding one with a Dimensity while remaining under US$350.
    2. MTK had video decode latency issues when streaming on moonlight/artemis, though that was last year when I was looking into a cheap gaming tablet so it may or may not be fixed by now.

    The best I could find...
    Headwolf FPad7 with MTK Dimensity 7050/8GB/512GB for around US$200
    Headwolf Titan 1 with MTK Dimensity 8300/12GB/256GB, US$300 but that's still at the kickstarter pledge phase.
    AyaNeo Pocket Play with MTK Dimensity 9300, but they haven't even started the kickstarter pledge phase for it.
    Vivo Pad 3 Pro, MTK Dimensity 9300/16GB/512GB, apparently around $520~$620, but unsure.
    Vivo pad 5, MTK Dimensity 9400/8GB/256GB for €570, 9400/16GB/512GB for €700

    And I gave up at that point

    If its any consolation, you can get a 400$ phone that comes with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 chipset 12 GB ram from Giztop.
    Reply
  • TerryLaze
    Stop calling this PC emulation!
    It's a frankenstein approach of emulating some of the CPU calls and adding in anything else with translation layers.
    A PC emulator would be able to run windows, running an lose interpretation of individual games is not the same.
    Reply
  • circadia
    Notton said:
    a Snapdragon 8/s Gen3/4/5 with 16GB RAM is not exactly cheap.
    depends on where you live, though.

    here in my country, Vietnam, an imported OnePlus 15 (with Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5) from China costs just 540 USD. Snapdragon 8 Gen 3/Elite phones with 12/16GB RAM (both officially sold and imported from China) constantly cost under 475 USD (such as the officially sold POCO F8 Pro from Xiaomi) (and the cheapest S8G3 phone I could find is the Honor GT (imported) at 260 USD). And we're not even talking about imported MediaTek flagship phones, e.g Vivo X300/Oppo Find X9 series.

    then again... x86 handhelds are somehow still quite competitive in pricing (?)
    as much as I hate Asuck, a ROG Xbox Ally with Z2A and 16/512GB costs just ≈460 USD, so there's that. Legion Go S's price seems a bit too high though, 770USD just for its base config.
    Reply
  • The Beav
    What defines whether it's a "translation layer" or just another emulator?
    Reply