There are also some Android-x86-based Android OSes out there, like Prime OS and Phoenix OS, but most of them are running far outdated versions of Android (Android 7.0 Nougat). Therefore, if you want an Android emulator for other platforms, you can read our article on the best android emulators for Windows PC and iOS emulators for Mac.

Make sure you are not using ARM image for the emulator. X86 image should work fine and will also take the benefit of hardware acceleration. For an emulator with x86 image and android marshmallow, follow following procedure (Everything from terminal, tested on mac):


Download Android Emulator For Linux Ubuntu


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To simplify the life of testers and make them hardy, we have listed down the best Android emulator for linux you can rely upon without second thoughts. After going through the list, you will be able to pick the right emulator for your business and save hassle and money in the long run.

I have tried both the AVD on Android studio and Genymotion emulator. My ubuntu 16.04.1 crashes (freezes) when starting the android emulator. My computer has 16G memory. This happens after I installed the latest updates for my ubuntu in 19 Sept 2016.

Since Neither Ubuntu Support 32 bit nor Android Developers tools support 32 bit (Now and Legally) and also some having low end pc(s) like 512 mb ram, and for casually playing games for pc the best option for running android is Android X86 . Its fast and always working android emulator(actually not emulator but an OS) you can use it for any thing even 20 years old pc can run it very very smoothly .

Are the android emulator and other android VMs (like Geny Motion, BlueStack...) faster in Ubuntu (Linux) than Windows? They are pretty heavy in my Windows and I don't know whether I should install a Linux-based OS to develop android apps.Thanks.

I am on linux which will be best option for linux. Bluestack i have some experience on windows. What about Anbox for me emulator is for some app what not working on linux - not for gaming. Some simple emulator what can recognize microphone and audio output.

I avoided it in the first place exactly because of that reason (had the mindset of how it was years ago), and I stayed with Genymotion for a while (which kind of worked, wayyy too much effort to run ARM based applications, something that should have been enabled by default). However, Genymotion started behaving weirdly and I decided to give the android sdk emulator a try.

It turns out because I am running the Android & Docker, on Ubuntu 16.04 stack, and I am using the emulator command. It creates the emulator as headless, which is fine, but for some reason, it makes the headless simulator without GPS. Is there anyway I can create the emulator as headful on this docker? Or can I add GPS to this headless android simulator? If I run normally headful, I will get the errors such as:

I have the exact same setup as you with debian testing and installed android studio 2.3.3. It took me a while to find out that you have to set it to software graphics for the emulator phone to appear.

As a test with out the hello world example setup a phone like Nexus 6P and set the API version to 23. Then run this command to see if will start and show you the android word. ~/Android/Sdk/emulator/emulator -avd Nexus_6P_API_23 -use-system-libs

Sorry to bump an older thread, but I too have recently been looking for a way to do this. More of for testing purposes. I run it via GameLoop in Win 11 on my custom prebuilt, and my CPU really struggles with it. CPU load seems to be generally lower running Linux Mint 21.1, which is very characteristic of Linux I have come to discover. Thing is, while an android os emulator is great, do any of them come with the kbm controller emulator built in for games like GameLoop and Bluestacks bot have? Most of the apps to do it that work good, either require it be a Bluetooth kb&m, or are paid apps. Money's tight, so I'm not interested in buying apps for this, especially if it ends up not working well.


But for the OP, if not for not wanting to run Windows, you'd have it made with GameLoop, as it's made by the devs of both CoD Mobile and PUBG Mobile specifically for these two games, and if you've got more than a basic CPU, it should run quite well.


For reference, system specs below:


Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-A320M-S2H V2 (Rev 1.1)

I need some guidance here. I don't have a smartphone but apparently one can get WhatsApp going using an android emulator on your PC. So I'm looking for a lightweight android emulator, I've seen a few massive download sizes for these emulators. Any ideas which will work with Puppy or any other solutions?

Based on reports from several windows users that had similar sounding problems (e.g. inside the VM: "DNS_PROBE_FINISHED_BAD_CONFIG"), I tried:

- "Deactivating all network connections except for the one that has the internet" => "ifconfig eth0 down", since I use wifi / wlan0

- "Disabling the windows firewall and virus scanners" => Stopped iptables for a while, didn't change anything. 

- "Running it in Administrator mode" => NOPE. But I checked that the user can read /etc/resolv.conf, which should be enough for android-emulator?

- "Blah blah blah proxy" => Don't have one, nothing to do here?

I have a need to install an Android emulator to support things via a VPN halfway across the country. But none that I have found work. And I've spent many days trying various settings and releases. So far, the best is Android x86 for kernel 4.9. But it ONLY works Sometimes, when I use the menu to select android without Acceleration.

FYI I do NOT want to run android within Windows or OSx for security reasons AND because the wireless network it needs to connect to should have NO production computing equipment on it. it is an IoT network only. Major reason for needing emulator is to configure and manage a pill dispenser, But also because I need to help someone with AV and other controls that she is having trouble managing herself (due to age).

I knew someone was going to tell me Android isn't supported by vmware. But that is like telling me vmware doesn't support LibraOffice. It Does, because they both run on Linux, which it does support. If some form of the vmtools (open or vmware) can be loaded on the base linux, it would surely assist the operation of android or anything else that runs on top of it.

As a part of an academic research I've done during the last summer, I have created an android operating system emulator on a Linux computer using Qemu. After installing the Android emulator, I am able to use the Android system as if I were using a Android smartphone; I can surf the internet, listen to music and play games of the Android system. I find this project very interesting and the Android emulator is a fun to play with, thus I will show you how to create your own Android emulator on your computer and I hope your will have fun doing so.

Once we have located the Android OS image file, we can start our Android emulator by typing in "./qemu.sh /android-x86-4.4-r5.iso". When entering the directory for your Android OS image file, you can use "tab" button to auto-complete or find valid directories names. Once the command is executed, the Qemu screen will open up with the Android OS image already loaded. The screen will print several options as presented in the picture. For a quick start, we can just chose the first option by highlighting the option using the up for down keys and confirm with the enter key. 006ab0faaa

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