That's great news, although personally I'm more interested in the GUI.
Not exactly the same, but pretty close.
Apparently you can overclock the virtual super fx chip, which might be worth playing with as the frame rates in those games are pretty bad.
and 2, but unfortunately it messes up Yoshi's Island's audio. Same with Stunt Race FX's, along with menu text flickering. But I read if you overclock Stunt Race to 1.25 then it's a good balance to get the boost and stop the audio and menu issues.
I finally got my pre-ordered SNES classic this weekend. I wasn't fortunate to get the NES classic, so this was my first experience with it. I love it. First the controllers really surprised me. Controllers are the first thing I always look at with extreme prejudice with any system I get, and especially any re-manufactured clones of classic controllers. The SNES classic's controllers feel spot on! The only difference I could tell is with the actual physical texture of the plastic being a bit more rough, grippy, similar to the Xbone controllers but not so rubber feeling. The buttons and d-pad feels good and quite honestly, I think I enjoy them more than my originals now.
Emulation on this is pretty good too. I was expecting Pi-like input lag (i know some people don't experience lag with their pi's but I'm hyper sensitive to it and I definitely feel it on my dust-collecting pi), but I was pleasantly surprised that the canoe emulator feels more responsive than I've experienced with emulation.
Love the menu, love the interface and demo mode when the system is idle. The save state and rewind feature is a nice bonus.
Overall I'm really happy with this, and it's going to be my travel system when I visit family. I used to lug around an original system with an upscaler device for family holiday time, which was always a pain in the ass to pack because I'm freaked out about damaging my gear. But now I can just take this with me it takes up minimal packing space.