| > if you know the definition of either of those words Let's put that to the test, ok https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/emulate 1a: "to imitate by means of an emulator" https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/emulator 2: "hardware or software that permits programs written for one computer to be run on another computer" Yup, FPGA recreating other hardware definitely fits the bill of emulation. Granted, Analogue has played up a marketing spin that boxes in "emulation" to mean "software running on some generic CPU" in order to claim "no emulation", but it's just marketing doing the work of marketing. |