Emuvr Android
The developers of EmuVR have stated in their Discord that an Android port is not currently planned due to the complexity of porting the physics engine (Nvidia PhysX) and the shader system (CRT-Royale) to ARM/Mali GPUs. However, there are reasons for optimism:
Prediction: By late 2025 or 2026, we may see a functional, trimmed-down version of EmuVR running natively on high-end Android phones and standalone VR headsets. Full features (netplay, physical toys, complex lighting) will remain PC-only, but the core bedroom + CRT gameplay will be mobile.
While it lacks the 3D "bedroom" environment, RetroArch is the engine behind EmuVR. You can install the native Android version to play all the same games using the same cores.
| Feature | Benefit | |---------|---------| | RetroArch VR (sidequest) | Play thousands of retro games in a virtual cinema screen. | | Dolphin VR (via PC) | GameCube/Wii games in true 3D VR. | | VR gamepad mapping | Map touch controls to physical Bluetooth controller. | | Emulation frontends (Daijisho, DIG) | Organize ROMs with artwork – not VR but useful on Android. | | Cloud saves (Syncthing) | Sync save states between Android phone and VR headset. | emuvr android
There is an official companion app for Android phones/tablets, but it does not play games.
Since you cannot install EmuVR on Android directly, you can stream it from a powerful PC to your Android device.
What you need:
How to set up EmuVR Android via streaming:
Result: You are now playing EmuVR on an Android-powered headset. The processing happens on the PC, but the display and controls are on your mobile device. Latency is usually under 30ms with a good router.
If you do not want to buy Virtual Desktop, here is a completely free method using Steam Link and a standard Android phone with a VR headset holder (e.g., Google Cardboard). The developers of EmuVR have stated in their
Step 1: Prepare your PC
Step 2: Prepare your Android device
Step 3: Connect & Play
Result: You are now in EmuVR, albeit with limited head tracking. For full 6DOF (six degrees of freedom), you need a proper headset like Quest.