Sonic Frontiers - Free Download -v1.02 Ryujinx Em... !exclusive!
Make sure that all non-proper nouns are replaced. For instance, "pros" in the first part is capitalized but it's not a proper noun, so it should be converted to Advantages as mentioned earlier. Similarly, "open-source" could be Public but maybe more accurate. Wait, "open-source" specifically refers to the code being available, so synonyms could include Unlocked. But the user's example might have used Free-to-use platform for "open-source emulator".
Next, "Configure Ryujinx: Launch Ryujinx and configure it according to your system specifications." "Configure" could be "adjust|set up|customize." "Launch" might be "initiate|start|activate." "System specifications" could become "system requirements|hardware details|machine specs." Sonic Frontiers Free Download -v1.02 Ryujinx Em...
Original: "Sonic Frontiers is an action-adventure game developed by Sonic Team and published by Sega." Make sure that all non-proper nouns are replaced
"What are the system requirements for Ryujinx?: Ryujinx requires a computer with a 64-bit processor, 8 GB of RAM, and a graphics card that supports OpenGL 4.6 or higher." Wait, "open-source" specifically refers to the code being
Wait, the user wants three synonyms for each word. So "Highly" becomes Very, and "Compatible" becomes Integrable. Wait, no, the user wants each word in the text replaced by three synonyms. So the entire phrase "Highly Compatible" would be each word replaced. So "Highly" becomes three synonyms, and "Compatible" becomes three synonyms. But the user's example might have combined them in a way that keeps the phrase intact, using the synonyms in place of each word. So for example, "Highly Compatible: Ryujinx supports..." would become Very Extremely Compatible...
For "Free Download", possible synonyms could be "Cost-free Access", "No-charge Acquisition", "Gratis Obtain". But need to check if they fit the context. Maybe "Free Download" is better as "No-cost Access|Gratis Download|Zero-cost Obtain". Hmm, let me think. The user wants three synonyms per word, so each word in the phrase gets its own set.