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Joystick with buttons on the side of the base and autofire setting. Konix: Super Chair A chair controller; direction is determined by leaning in the chair and the A, B, Start, and Select buttons are on hand grips. Sangkharom Trading Company: Super Controller Joystick conversion cover for the NES Controller (Basic) Bandai: Superstick
Possible elements of a video game joystick: 1. stick, 2. base, 3. trigger, 4. extra buttons, 5. autofire switch, 6. throttle, 7. hat switch (POV hat), 8. suction cups. A joystick, sometimes called a flight stick, is an input device consisting of a stick that pivots on a base and reports its angle or direction to the device it is controlling.
Overhead view of DataHand units that provide full computer keyboard and mouse functionality The right-hand of a Professional II keyboard [1]. The DataHand is an unconventional computer keyboard introduced in 1990 by DataHand Systems, Inc., designed to be operated without any wrist motion or finger extension.
3-axis joystick, 12 buttons (one in trigger position), 4-way hat, throttle: No: Buttons 1-6 are located on stick with 2-5 being accessible to thumb in normal holding position, throttle slider is easily held by the thumb when fingers of left hand are placed over buttons 7-12: Freedom 2.4 Cordless 2002: PC: RF 2.4 GHz: 3×AA
Speedpad - joypad, one auto-switch, L/R buttons as face buttons (Logic 3) Super Advantage - desktop joystick with auto-fire (ASCIIWare) Super Control Pad - standard joypad clone plus 3-position switch (?) Super Joy Card - standard joypad with auto-fire (Hudson Soft) Supercon - standard joypad, odd shape, odd start/select buttons (QuickShot)
Input: 4 digital buttons, 2 adjustable knobs, 3 toggle buttons, 1 switch 1987 [8] Sega Genesis/Mega Drive controller: Sega Genesis: Connectivity: Sega Genesis controller port Input: 4 digital buttons, D-pad: October 29, 1988 [9] [10] Nintendo Power Glove: NES: Connectivity: NES controller port Input: D-pad, A, B, Start, Select, Turbo Buttons ...
On a QWERTY keyboard, the stick is typically embedded between the G, H and B keys, and the mouse buttons are placed just below the space bar. The mouse buttons can be operated right-handed or left-handed due to their placement below the keyboard along the centerline.
The main features dropped were Z-axis control and the 8-way hat switch. Otherwise the differences were cosmetic, including shrinking the base, moving the throttle to the front of the base, and replacing 2 of the rounded buttons on the stick with more rectangular buttons. Support for this joystick was dropped with the advent of Windows XP.