In the year last month, the emulation scene was celebrating the fact that PS3 was making a good progress in the PC, yet this month its Xbox 2 turn, with the PCSX2 team announced that every game they put on their plate can now at least be played on the menu. The whole thing is good. In the emulator database, the majority of the 2689 games are playable. That means you can fire them up and enjoy them much. However, there may be some slight problems. Only 22 games were marked perfect, because because they were supposed to earn that badge they were absolutely free of any kind of bug whatsoever, which is going to be rare considering that they talked about one of the most common games of all time, and a game that they pretend to be the first one of those games that is that most idiosyncratic. The milestone today especially that the team’s celebrate is that while not all is completely playable, around every single PS2 game can now at least boot to its menu screen, which is 2688 of the 2689 games in PCSX2. That’s not the game for which? This needs special control emulation. Why’s Real World Golf, released in Europe in 2005, and in the United States of America in 2006 and in Australia in 2006. A rather dangerous golf game with poor menus and a lot of boring presentation, Real World Golf was notable for the hardware that was shipped with the game and the developer used it to create it. A gametrak piece with the player’s hands, was included in the box. It was a 3-D peripheral which used cables that determined movement. It was seen in the fighting game Dark Wind, and was bundled here with the idea that between the cables and a tiny plastic golf club included in the box, players would be able to swing exactly like they’d in real life, and have their actions recreated, kind of like a prototype version of Wii Golf. To see the games in action and Real World Golf, here’s a comparison of the year. I should get that thing started because that is what they say, and thus don’t count anymore.