This wiki offers several resources to help non-Japanese speakers who would like to make the jump. If you would like a Japanese cartridge, they are abundant and very inexpensive on eBay and Yahoo Japan Auctions. You can easily modify your SNES to accept a Japanese cartridge ( tutorial here). It is not required to run the game in Japanese, but most top runners do, as it saves at least 10 minutes from text speed. You can find these on eBay or Yahoo Japan Auctions (the latter requiring a proxy service such as Dejapan if you live outside of Japan). For SNES, ASCIIPAD is your best choice ( Super Joy Card is also good). Turbo controllers are allowed as long as they offer no macro programming abilities. Raphnet-Tech offers adapters to let you wire several controller types to your console that do not introduce any additional lag. If opting for Wii or Wii U virtual console, it is recommended to opt for a wired controller to avoid wireless input lag. If you use those cables directly on a LCD or HDMI TV, it will introduce upscaling lag, even on monitors with low latency specs, unless you are using a lagless upscaler like the Retrotink. If you are using composite, s-video, or component cables, it is strongly recommended to either use a CRT/Tube TV, or purchase a Retrotink if you would rather use a HDMI TV/monitor with this signal type. Make sure the cables on your console are appropriate for the TV you are using. Additionally, emulators tend to have issues with dropped inputs due to fluctuating frame rates. SNES/SFC with an original cartridge is the recommended way to play, as it runs at a faster framerate than all other options, and does not have the minor input delay present in other options.
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