It is fine for building software, and it is _much_ faster and often easier to use than ARM's proprietary (free beer) Foundation Model. Other architectures such as arm64-v8a, armeabi-v7, are not currently supported. You can configure and create different Android Virtual Devices with the Android Virtual Device Manager or from the adb command-line tool. This provides the user the magical experience of running an existing x86 win32 app without any modifications to the app. The same as the BlueStacks, this Android emulator offers you multiple tabs and accounts for playing a variety of games or using different accounts at once. So the best performant emulators are X86 based but if you want to run those ARM builds, the latest AVD which was produced was Android 7.1.1 Nougat API level … How x86 emulation works on ARM.
One big problem with android emulators in android studio was that, many of the release binaries from play store or from developers were of armeabi-v7a or arm64-v8a format.