In the sprawling ecosystem of PC gaming, emulation has long served as a bridge between obsolete hardware and modern audiences. Among the pantheon of emulators—from Dolphin to RPCS3—one platform occupies a unique, almost rebellious niche: TeknoParrot. While most emulators strive for historical accuracy, TeknoParrot focuses on accessibility and performance for a specific, fragile library of games. The phrase “TeknoParrot all games exclusive” is not merely a tagline; it is a declaration of war against planned obsolescence and a redefinition of what “exclusive” means in the 21st century.
| Game | Note | |------|------| | Pokken Tournament (Arcade) | Wii U/Switch versions lack arcade’s UI, balance, and certain animations. | | Dissidia Final Fantasy (Arcade) | Completely different from NT on PS4/PC. More 1v1, faster gameplay. | | Street Fighter V: Type Arcade | Arcade-exclusive UI, no V-Trigger II changes, different balancing. | | Gundam: Extreme Vs. 2 (XBoost / OverBoost) | Bandai won’t port these. TP is the only hope. | teknoparrot all games exclusive
| Game Title | Arcade Hardware | Why Exclusive | |------------|----------------|----------------| | Luigi’s Mansion Arcade | Sega RingEdge | Nintendo/Sega co-dev; never on Switch | | Mario Kart Arcade GP DX / GP 2 | Sega Nu / Triforce | Different physics from console versions | | Dead Heat (Bandai Namco) | Namco ES3 | Never left arcades | | Dream Raiders | Sega RingEdge | Touch-panel exclusive | | Pac-Man Smash | Namco ES3 | Arcade-only battle royale | In the sprawling ecosystem of PC gaming, emulation
Note: This list intentionally omits games like "Time Crisis 5" (partially on PSVR) or "After Burner Climax" (delisted from PS3/Xbox 360). | Game Title | Arcade Hardware | Why