My only question is, what's the difference? As far as I can tell, both sets of instructions do exactly the same thing.
Yes, you're right. The only difference that could appear is when a pseudo-instruction is translated to more than one "real" instruction.
Do the pseudos maybe exist just because they're easier to read?
Again, yes. That's why they exist. They give the illusion of a more expressive instruction set. Quoting Computer organization and design / Patterson & Hennessy:
... the assembler can also treat common variations of machine language instructions as if they were instructions in their own right. The hardware need not implement these instructions; however, their appearance in assembly language simplifies translation and programming. ...
Given your example, it's more "clear" to say:
l.s $f2, 24(t1) # Load Single contained in 24(t1) to $f2
than
lwc1 $f2, 24(t1) # Load Word into Coprocessor 1 from 24(t1) to $f2
(Those comments are just expanding how a human would read the asm mnemonic and operands, therefore not useful comments to actually write. From another PoV, you could say that lwc1
might actually merit a comment like # load single
while l.s
is self-explanatory.)
Similarly for integer, you can understand better:
move $7, $18 # move contents of $18 to $7
than
add $7, $18, $0
For me, it's just be helped by mnemonics to get better legible code.