Get started with Vita3K and play your favorite PSVita games!
GPU that supports OpenGL 4.4
Any x86_64 CPU
Minimum of 4GB RAM
GPU that supports Vulkan
GPU that supports shader interlock
x86_64 CPU with the AVX instruction set
8GB of RAM or greater
If you're having trouble running Vita3K and it complains about VCRUNTME140_1.dll was not found,
download and install the Visual C++ 2015-2022 Redistributable.
You need to be running a 64-bit operating system in order for Vita3K to work.
Some games require the system modules be present for Vita3K to (low level) emulate them. This can be done by installing the PS Vita firmware through Vita3K.
The firmware can be downloaded from the official PlayStation website, there's also an additional firmware package that contains the system fonts that needs to be installed. The font firmware package can be downloaded straight from the PlayStation servers.
Install both firmware packages using the File > Install Firmware menu option.
System modules can be managed in the Configuration > Settings > Core tab of the emulator,
we recommend Modules Mode > Automatic.
And if you have doubts some modules are causing crashes you can try to remove them.
“Hello. My name is Forrest. Forrest Gump.”
He teaches Elvis to wiggle his hips. He unwittingly exposes the Watergate break-in. He founds the shrimp-boat empire “Bubba Gump.” He runs across the country for three years, simply because he “felt like running.” Forrest Gump -1994-
Zemeckis’s technical wizardry was the secret sauce. The film pioneered the use of CGI “digital compositing” to insert Hanks into archival footage with JFK, LBJ, and Nixon. It made a feather’s flight feel like destiny. But the real magic was Hanks’s performance. With a slight Alabama drawl and eyes wide with earnest bewilderment, he made Forrest a secular saint: the fool who speaks truth to power because he doesn’t know power exists. The film’s release in the summer of 1994 was a post-Cold War, pre-internet moment of uneasy peace. The culture wars were simmering. Forrest Gump arrived as a soothing balm—and a lit match. “Hello
With that line, released on July 6, 1994, director Robert Zemeckis and screenwriter Eric Roth launched what would become a $677 million cultural earthquake. Forrest Gump was not merely the highest-grossing film of the year (beating The Lion King and The Shawshank Redemption ). It was a Rorschach test. To some, it was a heartwarming fable of American innocence. To others, a cynical, revisionist fever dream. Thirty years later, both interpretations are true—and that tension is why the film endures. On its surface, the film is deceptively simple. Tom Hanks, in his Oscar-winning role, plays a man with an IQ of 75 and a titanium spine. Forrest navigates four turbulent decades of U.S. history—Elvis, desegregation, Vietnam, ping-pong diplomacy, Watergate, Apple computers, and AIDS—with a guileless decency that bends every event toward the wholesome. He unwittingly exposes the Watergate break-in
Critics argue the film is a “boomer apology.” It reduces complex social movements (civil rights, feminism, anti-war protests) to chaotic background noise, while a docile, apolitical white man profits from every disaster. As the writer Ann Hulbert put it in 1994: “Forrest is a genial idiot-savant of the right, a walking argument for leaving history to the lucky and the simple.” No character has aged more painfully than Jenny Curran (Robin Wright). She is the film’s wounded heart—a woman who escapes an abusive home, plunges into the counterculture, and dies of a “mysterious virus” (implied to be HIV/AIDS). Her arc is a tragedy of untreated trauma. When she finally returns to Forrest, marries him, and then wastes away, the film suggests her rebellion was a sin, and his steadfast loyalty is her only salvation.