
Deepening on your hardware, this may come with more headaches than anything. Install Android to a partition on your SSD/HDD and run it natively. This requires some knowledge of VM setup.Īndroid X8: Write Android to a USB and boot from it. Emulators strip and modify the OS so it better streamlines with varying hardware to run faster and better. At times it may feel less polished than some of the gaming focused emulators.

With root access, you can strip or build Android up to what you want. VMWare or VirtualBox: You setup your version of Android X86 you want and install it to your performance requirements. Offers a more traditional Android experience. Similar to MEmu in that comes with preloaded games and suggestions. This is more akin to a virtual machine but with less technical know-how required. Therefor I was unable to actually test it.

I had too many issues with this one to make it work right. No preloaded crap.īlueStacks: Focused on gaming. Offers a more traditional Android experience while not stripping out and changing a lot. Android is a bit stripped of a traditional native experience. Does come with the preloaded games and developers can have their game suggested which means you either have it installed automatically, or it just appears as a link to install.
