F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Yes, you can use an Android emulator on Linux. It allows you to run Android apps without needing a physical device.

Yes, you can use an Android emulator on Linux. It allows you to run Android apps without needing a physical device.

Yes, you can use an Android emulator on Linux. It allows you to run Android apps without needing a physical device.

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Yaubarry
Member
204
12-27-2016, 11:58 AM
#1
I experimented with multiple emulators via VirtualBox and Genymotion, but only supports 18.04 or newer. On your laptop, you ran Remix OS inside a VM, yet it didn’t install on your PC in VirtualBox for another reason. Would you like suggestions for alternative options?
Y
Yaubarry
12-27-2016, 11:58 AM #1

I experimented with multiple emulators via VirtualBox and Genymotion, but only supports 18.04 or newer. On your laptop, you ran Remix OS inside a VM, yet it didn’t install on your PC in VirtualBox for another reason. Would you like suggestions for alternative options?

X
xFyUZx
Member
158
12-27-2016, 04:26 PM
#2
Bluestacks
X
xFyUZx
12-27-2016, 04:26 PM #2

Bluestacks

J
JakeTVGaming
Senior Member
259
12-28-2016, 08:52 PM
#3
Running on the standard Android Emulator in Android Studio functions properly. Ensure hardware acceleration is activated as recommended.
J
JakeTVGaming
12-28-2016, 08:52 PM #3

Running on the standard Android Emulator in Android Studio functions properly. Ensure hardware acceleration is activated as recommended.

B
BLVTH
Junior Member
31
01-02-2017, 11:59 AM
#4
For those seeking a bit of relief, Anbox is worth exploring. https://anbox.io/
B
BLVTH
01-02-2017, 11:59 AM #4

For those seeking a bit of relief, Anbox is worth exploring. https://anbox.io/

I
IAmLiam
Member
193
01-03-2017, 01:21 PM
#5
I used anbox on an old laptop—it functioned properly, and ARM worked too. However, some applications only played audio. Back then, I had an IGPU; did you see screenshots of the apps? @-DevNull-
I
IAmLiam
01-03-2017, 01:21 PM #5

I used anbox on an old laptop—it functioned properly, and ARM worked too. However, some applications only played audio. Back then, I had an IGPU; did you see screenshots of the apps? @-DevNull-

G
GoGoSam
Junior Member
3
01-03-2017, 01:29 PM
#6
I managed to capture video and audio in the apps, but they often seemed unstable. They would suddenly close, especially when I adjusted the screen size or tried to change settings. Basic apps and a few streaming services worked fine. Running a rooted image might not have made a difference. It seems like it could improve with more time and effort from the development side.
G
GoGoSam
01-03-2017, 01:29 PM #6

I managed to capture video and audio in the apps, but they often seemed unstable. They would suddenly close, especially when I adjusted the screen size or tried to change settings. Basic apps and a few streaming services worked fine. Running a rooted image might not have made a difference. It seems like it could improve with more time and effort from the development side.