Bring your own legally owned retro game files, upload them to a private Rebit library, and launch from the browser without rebuilding an emulator setup on every device.
Why Rebit
Built for browser-first retro play
Upload games you own, keep them organized in your account, and stop rebuilding the same local setup on every device.
Rebit accepts common retro file types and can detect supported systems so the launch path stays simple.
Once a game is in your library, use in-game saves, save states, screenshots, and cloud-friendly workflows for repeat play.
These are the product strengths that make browser-based retro play feel smoother, cleaner, and easier to return to.
Upload games you own, keep them organized in your account, and stop rebuilding the same local setup on every device.
Rebit accepts common retro file types and can detect supported systems so the launch path stays simple.
Once a game is in your library, use in-game saves, save states, screenshots, and cloud-friendly workflows for repeat play.
The goal is straightforward: less setup friction, cleaner sessions, and fewer breaks in momentum when you just want to play.
Pick Auto detection when you are unsure, or select the target system if you already know the file type.
Add a supported game file or a ZIP containing one main supported game file.
Open the game from your library, test the first save, and create a manual state before a long run.
Return to the same game from your account instead of hunting for local save folders.
The difference is not magic. It is fewer setup chores, faster starts, and a cleaner workflow around the same games.
These pages cover related ways to keep your library, sessions, and saves feeling organized.
A strong next step for Pokemon hacks, portable RPGs, and short-session progression.
Use browser play for compact handheld classics and quick return sessions.
Understand what works best for .nds files, touch-heavy games, and save testing.
Jump into specific guides when you want setup advice, troubleshooting help, or a more detailed workflow.
Step-by-step product documentation for supported systems, ZIP extraction, and RomM import.
How to protect progress and manage useful files after your first upload.
A practical patching and save-safety workflow for Pokemon ROM hack players.
The basics, the edge cases, and the questions people usually ask before they start a session.
Yes. Rebit is built for players who upload legally owned game files to a private browser library.
No. Rebit does not provide copyrighted ROM downloads. You bring your own legally owned game files.
Common supported formats include .nes, .sfc, .smc, .gb, .gbc, .gba, .nds, .cue, .chd, .pbp, .bin, .img, .mdf, .toc, .cbn, .m3u, .ccd, .iso, and .exe.
Yes, when Rebit can find a supported game file inside the ZIP. For best results, keep one main game file in the archive.
Rebit gives your legally owned retro games a cleaner home: upload once, launch faster, and keep saves easier to return to.