![dos emulator mac game dos emulator mac game](https://macnoob.ru/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/doom1.jpg)
This lets you easily hot-swap CDs and floppies. These icons fit in especially well in the DOS Games folder - the default location for imported games - which can be optionally given an iBooks-style wooden shelf appearance.Īdditionally, the inspector lets you add and eject DOS drives by (all together now) drag-and-drop, at any time while you're playing a game. The inspector also lets you add cover art to your games, again by drag-and-drop: images are processed to look like shiny game boxes and become the Finder icon for the game. If needed though, you can tweak common emulation settings (like CPU speed and mouse behaviour) while you play, using Boxer's inspector window. It automatically pre-configures dozens of games that need custom emulation settings, and more automatic configurations are added as they are found.
![dos emulator mac game dos emulator mac game](https://imag.malavida.com/mvimgbig/download-fs/mednafen-21847-1.jpg)
Boxer guides you through the game's installer if needed, then packages the game up into a gamebox (and rips its CD if appropriate).īoxer aims to make games require zero configuration and zero knowledge of the emulator's esoteric inner workings. You can create gameboxes by drag-and-dropping game CDs, floppies, disc images or folders onto Boxer's game import window. They're path-independent, which means they can be stored wherever you like, moved around, backed up easily, and shared with friends, without needing to reconfigure anything inside the gamebox. Each gamebox is a self-contained DOS ecosystem that contains the game and everything it needs to run: drives, configuration settings, documentation etc.
![dos emulator mac game dos emulator mac game](https://drfone.wondershare.com/images/others/emulator-for-mac-10.png)
Boxer uses DOSBox as its emulation core, but it has a completely redesigned UI and workflow for preparing and playing games.īoxer bundles DOS games into gameboxes, a self-contained app-like package format that appears as a single file in Finder and can be launched by double-clicking.