
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!

— Descend well.
Version 0.5, build “MonGreen,” is the current public snapshot. And while “version 0.5” suggests early access jank, what’s here is shockingly coherent. You wake—or rather, you manifest —at the base of a colossal, half-submerged chasm. The sky is a bruise. The water moves like oil. And somewhere above, half-hidden in the dark, she moves. Most games with giant characters treat them as setpieces or bosses. MonGreen does something smarter and far more disturbing. Giantess Of Abyss -v0.5- -MonGreen-
There are games that scare you. There are games that awe you. And then there are rare, jagged little gems that make your sense of scale scream . — Descend well
You loved NaissanceE , Kairo , or the dream-logic dread of Iron Lung . Avoid if: You need clear objectives, fast pacing, or if the idea of being a conscious speck beneath a goddess’s fingernail gives you the wrong kind of chills. Have you descended into v0.5? Did you find the hidden alcove behind her left ankle? Let me know in the comments—if you survived long enough to type. You wake—or rather, you manifest —at the base
There’s a specific moment in v0.5—about 45 minutes in, if you’re thorough—where you reach a ledge and realize you’ve been standing on the back of her hand for the last ten minutes without knowing it. She shifts in her “sleep.” The world moves. And you just have to hold on .
is exactly that kind of experience. And if you’ve only just stumbled across the name—perhaps on a niche forum or a late-night itch.io deep dive—let me be the first to say: you are not ready for what 0.5 already delivers. What Even Is This? Let’s strip away the genre labels for a moment. Giantess Of Abyss is a first-person atmospheric horror-exploration game. But calling it “horror” feels too narrow. It’s more like scale horror —the specific, primal dread of being reduced to a speck before something that should not be that large .