
A cross platform, customizable graphical frontend for launching emulators and managing your game collection.

A cross platform, customizable graphical frontend for launching emulators and managing your game collection.


Pegasus is a graphical frontend for browsing your game library (especially retro games) and launching them from one place. It's focusing on customizability, cross platform support (including embedded devices) and high performance.
Instead of launching different games with different emulators one by one manually, you can add them to Pegasus and launch the games from a friendly graphical screen from your couch. You can add all kinds of artworks, metadata or video previews for each game to make it look even better!
With additional themes, you can completely change everything that is on the screen. Add or remove UI elements, menu screens, whatever. Want to make it look like Kodi? Steam? Any other launcher? No problem. You can add animations and effects, 3D scenes, or even run your custom shader code.
Pegasus can run on Linux, Windows, Mac, Raspberry Pi, Odroid and Android devices. It's compatible with EmulationStation metadata and gamelist files, and instantly recognizes your Steam games!

The Paradox of the "Guiding Light": An Analysis of Taylor Swift’s "Dear Reader"
Produced by Jack Antonoff, the track features a low-fi, electronic soundscape that creates an atmosphere of late-night solitude. The vocal production shifts between an "ethereal, layered" quality during the advice-giving verses and a raw, effect-free delivery during the more personal bridge. This musical contrast highlights the tension between Swift the "Oracle" and Swift the "Person". Taylor Swift - Dear Reader (Audio)
The chorus contains the song’s most striking contradiction: "Never take advice from someone who's falling apart". Here, Swift breaks the fourth wall to admit her own fallibility, portraying herself as an "unreliable narrator" who feels like an impostor in her own fame. By placing this track at the very end of an album filled with late-night confessions, she suggests that the "bright" persona seen by the world is often a mask for a more isolated reality. Sonics and Subtext The Paradox of the "Guiding Light": An Analysis