October 20th, 2008 by Benj Edwards
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[ From COMPUTE!, November 1983 ]
Discussion topic of the week: What’s the worst video game controller you’ve ever used?
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October 20th, 2008 at 1:34 pm
Worst? Has to go to the original Atari CX45, the standard Atari first-party joystick from the 2600 well on into the later days (I believe the same piece of junk was even the standard stick for the ST). As others have said in many places, flimsy, uncomfortable, poor feedback, shoddy construction… and that was be right-handers. As a lefty, that bloody single-fire-button-in-the-upper-left-corner trick made the blasted thing beyond painful to use.
What a piece of trash hardware that was. Fortunately there were tons of third-party alternatives. My old Suncom TAC2 wasn’t so bad as a replacement (though the supposedly “improved” TAC3 had lousy fire buttons and a ridiculously long throw, and generally stunk).
October 20th, 2008 at 2:22 pm
Wow, tough call. I had an Apple II controller that was built for a pygmy child. The fire button was too close to the stick, so you could only operate the stick with the top of a finger. Couple that with very weak return springs and a 4.5′ cord and you had a migraine waiting to happen.
Now, if you want to qualify the “Nintendo Power Glove” as a joystick… I think it wins hands down.
October 20th, 2008 at 2:42 pm
Wow. For some reason that picture confuses the crap out of me!
P.S. I love the blog! Keep up the good work!
October 20th, 2008 at 4:04 pm
The Epyx 500XJ, the official wireless Atari 2600 joysticks, the Power Glove, and the Xbox 360 D-pad.
October 20th, 2008 at 8:18 pm
The original Radio Shack joysticks for the Tandy CoCo were pretty bad. It was common for the fire buttons to break and they were not self-centering. I eventually got a third-party stick; I don’t recall the make, but it was one of the nicer models with trim pots and self-centering, like you’d see on a model plane controller.
October 20th, 2008 at 10:31 pm
I had several different joysticks for the 2600…the wireless ones (actually used them quite a bit, but boy were they a brick), the Tron version with suction cups on the bottom, and probably the worst was one that came with some space game…it was two-handed with the button on top and a “radar”-like display pasted in the middle.
October 20th, 2008 at 11:19 pm
The NES Max. Definitely. The weird control… thing was just too hard for me to use.
October 21st, 2008 at 8:40 am
The Atari 2600 keypad was pretty bad…..at least for me….I didn’t have the best of luck with the overlays, so had to memorize the button positions if I wanted to use them….wound up only learning a few of the more crucial ones and eventually didn’t even play the game much (too many other games were much better — Yar’s Revenge, anyone?)
Layne
October 21st, 2008 at 8:43 am
BTW, as an ambidextrous person, even *I* don’t get that joystick…..it looks like the fire button piece was detatchable (in other words: lost easily) and you could flip it over so that the fire button moved from one side to the other……why not just put a fire button on each side….had to have cost less to make that way, cheaper to engineer, etc. But I guess then, no one would have bought the ugly thing.
Layne
October 21st, 2008 at 9:58 am
I think that is a tie for me between the Atari 5200 and ColecoVision controllers. I would always have some serious hand cramps after fifteen minutes of play. I finally broke down and built a custom controller for the ColecoVision I saw in a magazine (sorry, don’t remember what magazine it was) that used a Wico arcade stick mounted on an old push button desk phone. As far as the 5200, never found a good replacement. I think Wico had something out there, but by the time it did, the 5200 was pretty much dead and buried.
October 21st, 2008 at 4:37 pm
Couldn’t find out too much about this company, but I did find out that they made joysticks and games for the 2600 and joysticks and trackballs for Apple computers. They probably went out of business during the videogame crash of ’83.
http://www.atarimagazines.com/v2n9/Anticpixcontrollers.html
http://www.atarimagazines.com/v2n10/ROMFUN.html
http://www.txbobsc.com/aal/1983/aal8306.html
http://www.classiccmp.org/pipermail/cctalk/1998-March/096910.html
October 21st, 2008 at 10:53 pm
I know the 5200 controller gets a bad rap but I thought it was okay as long as you cleaned it every week. Pain in the butt. I think the worst is the o.g. Gameboy advance. It always made my hands numb.
October 22nd, 2008 at 6:18 am
The Colecovision controller, hands down. It equalled pain if you played any more than 2 hours.
October 22nd, 2008 at 12:39 pm
No update on the joystick you refer to, but I did find this: http://www.chromesphere.com/coleco/index.html
and this:
http://gamesmuseum.pixesthesia.com/history/gen3/col5200.txt
Both of which are probably interesting.
Layne
October 22nd, 2008 at 4:04 pm
For the NES, I had a controller called “NES Max.” The buttons were fine, but the directional pad was replaced by the control pad was terrible. Instead of cross, you had to move around a little circle inside of a bigger circle, and then push down on the circle. In addition to turning moving into a 2-step process, it was terribly unresponsive.
November 1st, 2008 at 5:47 am
The Nintendo Gamecube Controller, The Atari Jaguar pad, and for a slightly less vintage touch the Wii Classic controller (the wire goes toward you to attach to the Wii’mote).
March 6th, 2011 at 6:39 am
@walmartcartpusher: what’s your beef with the Cube’s controller?
Anyway, I’ll go with the ColecoVision Super Action Controller, the Jaguar pad, and the NES Max.
July 18th, 2015 at 3:54 pm
I bought a pair of these Enjoysticks and they are far from the worst, in fact quite close to the very best, especially for the 2600. .. The controllers were a big barrier for me on the 2600 and the Enjoystick bridged the gap perfectly. I was looking for something like the Vectrex analog thumbstick and this is as close as I’ve come. I’m not sure what is going on electronically but there are some analogy looking potentiometers inside of the Enjoystick and it has a very smooth centering action. The fire button leaves something to be desired but it is still leaps and bounds ahead of the standard Atari stick even in that department. .. Obviously this does not substitute real analog for the natively digital VCS directional controls, but it feels so sweet. Moving diagonally is quite easy.