There’s a button to simulate a shake, set a virtual location that it’ll use as your GPS information for any app that needs it. With Nox Player, you get all those features right at your fingertips. So if you’re testing or using an app that depends on those things, it’s obviously not going to work. Some of the biggest drawbacks of emulators include things like the simple fact that they don’t have a gyroscope, or an accelerometer, GPS access, and stuff like that. The emulator is pretty fast and in my usage, I didn’t find any issues with its responsiveness, speed, or just general snappiness. It’s almost like using an actual Android device. With Nox Player, all that is just not there at all. If you’ve ever used an emulator, you’d know how annoying it can be when your emulator has visible input lag, or frame drops everywhere you look. Nox Player is by far the snappiest emulator I’ve used in a long time. It does almost everything you might need an emulator to do and brings features like full support for PUBG Mobile, screen recording, the ability to install APKs easily, and a lot more. Nox Player is quite frankly one of the best Android emulators I’ve used on Windows 10.