

Get Audacity, select stereo mix in the drop down box as pictured. Super Simple explanation minus the reasoning or observations above. Apparently Hiei-YYH and sigmax got this to work so hopefully it'll work for others. It also best because it can play games with the least video and audio errors (graphics and sound glitches are very possible for all emulators). Game Boy and Gameboy Advance games are also playable.
#WORKING NOGBA EMULATOR FULL#
This of course probably will make your mic useless, however simply setting the drop-down box in Audacity back to Microphone should make it work again in Windows. The NOGBA is considered the fastest working DS rom emulator it can run most Nintendo DS games at full speed on most computer processors. Of course since mic input in No$gba only works if sound is on, you can't stop it from accepting the music as input at will (well you could probably just turn sound off for a second then turn it back on, I've no game that requires that to try it out on). So if you don't have a mic, you can just leave it on Stereo Mix and any sound/music being played No$gba should think is mic input (as I said the music in Phoenix Wright 1 was good enough to blow away the fingerprint dust). Meaning if you leave it on Stereo/Mono Mix and close the program, put on some music and open anything else that records from the mic (teamspeak, windows sound recorder, skype) and you will notice it to will instead of grabbing mic input, grab what's being played. mGBA is simple to use, boasts cheat code functions and save states, and has a pleasing interface.
#WORKING NOGBA EMULATOR ANDROID#
However instead of just just doing that, it seems to change what's being played directly into mic input in windows itself. Working as a stand alone emulator for multiple devices from Android smartphones and Macs to modified consoles such as the Nintendo Wii, mGBA is a solid choice for GBA game emulation. It defaults to microphone, selecting Stereo/Mono mix makes it record from what's playing in your speakers. In it you can select which source to record from in that drop down box from the top (as seen in the picture). Dont worry, this is almost always a false alarm. If my work appears useful to you then you can also pay for it.

I have this free open source audio recording program called Audacity. NOTE: Emulator files are often unrecognized by your anti-virus software and detected as malware (viruses, worms, etc.). You can download, test, and use my software & documents for free. You don't need a microphone to make this work. Okay slightly less confusing explanation of what I did.
