While official yuzu releases have stopped, the open-source nature of the project led to the creation of several "forks." These are community-led projects that took the final yuzu code and attempted to continue its development under new names.
Released on March 1, 2024 , these builds were typically reserved for Patreon supporters and featured experimental optimizations, such as cutting-edge Vulkan renderer updates and memory management improvements.
A complete rewrite of the shader decompiler in 2021, which drastically reduced "shader stutter" and improved graphical accuracy. yuzu releases
An initiative to improve the resolution scaler and texture handling, which was re-added after a brief hiatus. The Shutdown and Legal Impact
Before the project was permanently shuttered, yuzu operated on two primary release tracks: and Early Access . While official yuzu releases have stopped, the open-source
In May 2023, the team launched a dedicated Android version, bringing high-performance Switch emulation to mobile devices. Historical Milestones in Development
The release cycle ended abruptly when Nintendo of America sued Tropic Haze LLC (the entity behind yuzu) in February 2024. Nintendo alleged that yuzu was "primarily designed" to bypass technological protection measures (TPMs) and facilitated piracy on a massive scale, specifically citing over one million illegal downloads of The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom . As part of the settlement, the developers agreed to: in damages to Nintendo. An initiative to improve the resolution scaler and
yuzu was announced on , by the creators of the 3DS emulator Citra. Its release history is marked by several "Project" codenames that significantly boosted performance: