| o_O.Q said:
the vectrex analog stick could be tilted with your thumb like a regular thumbstick ( the reason for the sticks being the size they are ) or operated like a joystick, another console like that was the arcadia and as i said before wasn't reffering to the design of the controller itself beyond the stick "analog controls were not part of the original design of the PS1" true although for me at least given that most of the popular games associated with the ps1 used the dual analogs i don't see why that matters |
From the images of the controller I never imagined anyone holding it with the thumb the precision looks impossible to achieve due to the height of the stick, rigid design and poor grip. Add to that the article on its controller I sent you which mentions it was made to resemble the arcade sticks and you can understand why I'm skeptical of what you're saying. It could've been wishful thinking on their part, but I have a hard time believing people used it with their thumbs, I beg your pardon. Rather I see people playing on the floor, gripping the analog stick by their left hand with 3 fingers.
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Realize the PS1 barely made use of the dual analog, it wasn't designed with that in mind." "As far as I remember, these were used as supplements for the D-pad, and within the games mentioned did not offer pressure sensitivity " you have me confused here as far as i know dual analogs are generally used in terms of one stick providing character movement and the other camera control and as i stated before several ps1 games allowed for that quite well in addition to other control layouts your rant on pressure sensitivity in terms of dual analogs makes me wonder if you even understand the main purpose behind the dual analog layout |
If the PS1 didn't make use of pressure sensitivity in its games, not in depth, not even in 360 degrees rotation as far as I remember, then 1) it was a waste of harware tech which Sony provided in the dualshock, and 2) it is a considerable downgrade from Nintendo's offering software-wise. This defeats your improving on what Nintendo offers and bringing to the masses argument.
@rant. Your failure to understand its importance defeats me, after two gens of its use PS2 and Wii gen. Point is, Nintendo had it first, PS1's dual analog without pressure sensitivity is an afterthought and Software-wise, Sony didn't offer barely anything to the masses with it, I would be hard-pressed to be proven wrong with software numbers. I'm talking about the gaming experiences, not having two sticks hanging out of your controller. More games were sold for N64 with the full analog experience than the few games that may have offered that experience on PS1. This also addresses your last point.
Again, not only did Nintendo bring it to the masses as software sales will tell us, but hey also put in the costly R&D to achieve it. They certainly get my vote for innovator and populariser.







