Originally posted by: BennyD
i use a gamecube to usb converter which is virtually the same and it works very well
just a little scarce on the software front![]()
Originally posted by: mchammer187
Originally posted by: BennyD
i use a gamecube to usb converter which is virtually the same and it works very well
just a little scarce on the software front![]()
have you tried a wavebird with this?
nope:
Does this USB adaptor work with the Wavebird Wireless controller?
No, It's only working with the standard original Nintendo controller at the moment.
Originally posted by: Choralone
I've been using a $9.99 PSX to USB adapter my wife picked up for me from Radio Shack for about 3 months now. It's been flawless as far as I can tell. I'm using a PS2 dual shock controller and everything has worked just fine. I'd MUCH rather pay $20 for a Sony PS2 controller and $10 for an adapter than $30-50 for a PC gamepad that doesn't work as well.
Originally posted by: IcePhoenix
Originally posted by: Choralone
I've been using a $9.99 PSX to USB adapter my wife picked up for me from Radio Shack for about 3 months now. It's been flawless as far as I can tell. I'm using a PS2 dual shock controller and everything has worked just fine. I'd MUCH rather pay $20 for a Sony PS2 controller and $10 for an adapter than $30-50 for a PC gamepad that doesn't work as well.
I got a Gravis Gamepad pro, which basically is a PS2 controller, for my PC. Ran me $20. Works great![]()
Originally posted by: mchammer187
Originally posted by: IcePhoenix
Originally posted by: Choralone
I've been using a $9.99 PSX to USB adapter my wife picked up for me from Radio Shack for about 3 months now. It's been flawless as far as I can tell. I'm using a PS2 dual shock controller and everything has worked just fine. I'd MUCH rather pay $20 for a Sony PS2 controller and $10 for an adapter than $30-50 for a PC gamepad that doesn't work as well.
I got a Gravis Gamepad pro, which basically is a PS2 controller, for my PC. Ran me $20. Works great![]()
except the D-pad is 1 big button instead of 4 small ones
that is my main problem with that one and no analog
That specific problem was the reason why I went the whole adapter/PS2 controller route. I knew the PS2 controller worked well, would last and it had the four seperate buttons as the d-pad. I still have a Gravis Gamepad Pro, but the PS2 controller works MUCH better, plus I can switch on analog mode anytime. Great for NFS and other racing games.Originally posted by: IcePhoenix
Originally posted by: mchammer187
Originally posted by: IcePhoenix
Originally posted by: Choralone
I've been using a $9.99 PSX to USB adapter my wife picked up for me from Radio Shack for about 3 months now. It's been flawless as far as I can tell. I'm using a PS2 dual shock controller and everything has worked just fine. I'd MUCH rather pay $20 for a Sony PS2 controller and $10 for an adapter than $30-50 for a PC gamepad that doesn't work as well.
I got a Gravis Gamepad pro, which basically is a PS2 controller, for my PC. Ran me $20. Works great![]()
except the D-pad is 1 big button instead of 4 small ones
that is my main problem with that one and no analog
Ahh, I see. My main problem is that the D-Pad does stick at times, and when you are pressing down, it will think you are pressing left and down as well.
The PS2 controller acts like it should. If you get a dual shock controller you can try using the analog stick if you're feeling lucky. I never could play any sort of fighting came worth a darn with the GGP, and the PS2 controller isn't totally ideal, but it works much better than the ever GGP did for me.Originally posted by: LordJezo
How is the response time?
Using the Gravis Gamepad Pro and trying to play fighting games is a pain.. the d-pad is not sensitive enough to be able to pull moves off and such.
Originally posted by: LordJezo
How is the response time?
Using the Gravis Gamepad Pro and trying to play fighting games is a pain.. the d-pad is not sensitive enough to be able to pull moves off and such.