
When the winner of the Nintendo World Championships put his signed 3DS up for auction in early 2026, the bidding cracked $20,000 in days. The handheld is officially retro now. Online play shut down, and Nintendo’s storefront went dark in 2023. If you grew up with Pokémon X, Fire Emblem Awakening, or Monster Hunter 4, the only practical way to play those games today is on Android.
The 3DS emulator scene fractured after Nintendo’s 2024 legal pressure shuttered the original Citra project. What replaced it is a constellation of community forks, each fixing a different rough edge. We tested seven 3DS emulator apps that still install cleanly on Android in 2026, with notes on which builds are actively maintained and which are coasting on momentum.
What to look for in a 3DS emulator
- Active development. Forks that haven’t shipped a commit in six months tend to break on the next Android release.
- Vulkan over OpenGL. Vulkan rendering halves frame drops on Snapdragon 8-series and Mali-G7 GPUs.
- Per-game settings. Some titles need software shaders, others need accurate-precision floats. Per-game profiles save you from breaking a save by changing a global toggle.
- Right-stick mapping. The 3DS Circle Pad Pro buttons matter for Monster Hunter and Kid Icarus. Look for emulators that expose the second analog stick natively.
- Save-state portability. Emulator forks fork their save formats. Pick one and stay there, or you’ll be redumping saves every weekend.
- No microtransactions or ads. Any 3DS emulator that pushes interstitials is almost certainly a repackaged build. Stick to the source forks.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Open source | Free | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Citra (legacy builds) | Compatibility records | Yes | Yes | The most documented per-game settings list |
| Lime3DS | Active general use | Yes | Yes | Frequent Vulkan and shader fixes |
| Lemonade | Touchscreen-first play | Yes | Yes | Cleanest dual-screen layout editor |
| Mandarine | Performance tuning | Yes | Yes | Aggressive optimisations for mid-range chips |
| Encore 3DS | Stability | Yes | Yes | Slow release cadence, fewer regressions |
| Panda3DS | Modern Android phones | Yes | Yes | Built around Vulkan from day one |
| Azahar | Citra successor project | Yes | Yes | Combines fork patches into one upstream |
The apps
1. Citra — Best for compatibility records
Citra is the original 3DS emulator, even if its official builds stopped landing in 2024. The legacy APKs still install on Android 14, run most of the library, and are the historical reference every other fork measures itself against. The wiki documents per-game settings for hundreds of titles, which is invaluable when you’re trying to coax Pokémon Sun into running without crashing in Festival Plaza.
Where it falls short: No new features. The build you can find today is the version from before the project shut down.
Pricing: Free.
Platforms: Android, Windows, macOS, Linux.
Bottom line: Worth keeping around as a reference. Switch to a maintained fork for daily play.
2. Lime3DS — Best general-use fork
Lime3DS picked up most of the Citra contributors after the shutdown and has been the most active fork through 2025 and 2026. Vulkan rendering is the default, the build pipeline ships APKs for several CPU architectures, and shader caching cuts the first-launch stutter that Citra was known for. Compatibility with Pokémon Y, Fire Emblem Echoes, and the Monster Hunter line is the best of any current build.
Where it falls short: The frequent release cadence means saves occasionally break across versions. Back them up before you update.
Pricing: Free.
Platforms: Android, Windows, macOS, Linux.
Bottom line: Lime3DS is the default for most people in 2026.
3. Lemonade — Best for touchscreen-first play
Lemonade is the fork that takes the dual-screen problem seriously. The layout editor is the best in any 3DS emulator, with the ability to scale, rotate, and swap the top and bottom screens per-game. Touch input for the bottom screen feels close to native, which matters for Phantom Hourglass-style stylus games and the menu-heavy JRPGs.
Where it falls short: Falls behind Lime3DS on raw compatibility. Some 3D-heavy titles need extra tweaking.
Pricing: Free.
Platforms: Android, Windows.
Bottom line: Pick Lemonade if you mostly play touchscreen-driven titles and you hate the default Citra layout.
4. Mandarine — Best for performance tuning
Mandarine is the fork built around squeezing frames out of mid-range Snapdragon 7 series and Dimensity chips. It exposes more aggressive shader and texture cache options than Lime3DS, and it lets you cap the resolution at 1x for the games that need every bit of headroom. The discord-led nightly builds catch fixes within a day of upstream patches.
Where it falls short: The settings menu is deep. Defaults aren’t always the right starting point.
Pricing: Free.
Platforms: Android, Windows.
Bottom line: Mandarine earns its place if you’re running on a budget phone and you want the best frame pacing.
5. Encore 3DS — Best for stability
Encore 3DS is the conservative fork. New features land slowly, and the maintainers backport security and crash fixes before chasing rendering tricks. The trade-off: lower top-end performance than Mandarine, but you can update without dreading the changelog. Saves carry over cleanly between releases.
Where it falls short: No headline features. The audience is players who care about save safety, not bleeding-edge rendering.
Pricing: Free.
Platforms: Android, Windows.
Bottom line: Encore is the fork for a 200-hour Pokémon save you can’t afford to corrupt.
6. Panda3DS — Best for modern Android phones
Panda3DS was written from scratch around Vulkan and modern Android APIs, not retrofitted from Citra. On a recent Pixel or Galaxy phone the difference shows up as faster cold starts and lower battery drain than the Citra-family forks. The trade-off is compatibility, which is still catching up.
Where it falls short: Some games crash on boot. The compatibility list is shorter than Lime3DS or Citra’s.
Pricing: Free.
Platforms: Android, Windows, macOS, Linux.
Bottom line: Panda3DS is one to watch. Try it on your favourite game first and keep Lime3DS as a fallback.
7. Azahar — Best Citra successor in 2026
Azahar is the consolidation project that several fork maintainers started in late 2025 to pull the best patches back into one upstream. It merges Lime3DS’s render improvements with Encore’s save stability and is gaining the kind of contribution graph Citra had at its peak. The Android app is in active beta and ships nightly through the project’s website.
Where it falls short: Still in beta. Expect occasional crashes on launch.
Pricing: Free.
Platforms: Android, Windows, macOS, Linux.
Bottom line: Bookmark Azahar. It’s the most plausible long-term home for the 3DS emulator community.
How to pick the right one
- If you just want it to work tonight: Lime3DS.
- If you have a $1,500 phone: Panda3DS or Azahar.
- If you have a $250 phone: Mandarine with the low-resolution preset.
- If you have a save file you’d cry over losing: Encore 3DS.
- If you play stylus-heavy games: Lemonade.
- If you want the historical reference: keep Citra installed alongside whichever fork you settle on.
You don’t need to dump your own cartridges, but it’s the legally clean way. Citra’s wiki still documents the GodMode9 dump process, and the files transfer to your phone over USB or sftp.
FAQ
Is Citra still available in 2026?
The original Citra project shut down, but the APK is still circulating and works on current Android versions. For active development, use one of the forks like Lime3DS, Mandarine, or Azahar.
Is it legal to use a 3DS emulator on Android?
The emulator software itself is legal. The legal grey area is in the ROMs. You’re on safe ground if you dump games from cartridges you own. Downloading commercial ROMs from the internet remains a copyright infringement.
What’s the best 3DS emulator for Pokémon games?
Lime3DS and Citra (legacy) both have the deepest per-game compatibility notes for the Pokémon line. Encore 3DS is the safest if you’ve already invested 100+ hours into a save.
Do I need a powerful phone to emulate 3DS games?
A Snapdragon 7 Gen 2 or better, or any Pixel from the 7 series onward, runs most games at full speed. Older or budget chips can run the 2D games well and struggle with 3D titles like Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate.
Can I play 3DS games online?
No. The official Nintendo Network for 3DS shut down in 2024. Some hobbyist Pretendo servers exist for select titles, but most online features are gone.