Raspbian, Ubuntu, Arch, Manjaro), or even on macOS (both on x86 and Apple Silicon). Additionally, you can of course install it on a standard Linux distro (e.g. Nowadays, Amiberry is already included in several popular distros (like RetroPie, DietPi, Amibian, The RetroArena, Batocera, Pimiga and others) and in many cases it can be installed or upgraded from within their ecosystems. You are welcome to join the project and help make Amiberry even better! Visit the project page on Github for more. It’s an open-source project under GPLv3 that started back in 2016, built with the efforts of several people and based on previous work of others.
Additionally, there are several features that were developed specifically for Amiberry, such as WHDLoad support, custom events, support for RetroArch mapping, etc. The code is based on the latest WinUAE for the core emulation, but with some parts stripped down and optimized specifically for lower-powered boards. Amiberry is an optimized Amiga emulator, originally designed for ARM-based SoCs (such as the Raspberry Pi) but now also available for macOS (both Intel and Apple Silicon) and Linux x86-64, that brings you the highest performance Amiga emulation. Be it a classic A500, A1200, CD32 or up to a high-end model equipped with a 68040 and a graphics card, we’ve got you covered.