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Home > Archive > Nintendo gamecube > March 2005 > Re: Revolution controller: No Buttons, No Sticks, All Touch Screen
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Re: Revolution controller: No Buttons, No Sticks, All Touch Screen
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| Soni tempori elseu romani yeof helsforo nisson ol sefini ill des Mon, 28 Mar
2005 18:37:45 GMT, sefini jorgo geanyet des mani yeof do
japan.videogames.nintendo, yawatina tan reek esk "G" <G@G.com> fornis do
marikano es bono tan el:
quote:
>
>Its a joystick, not the same as an analouge control pad. The thumbstick is
>completely different to a joystick.
The Master System had a thumb-controlled analogue (again, note spelling) pad.
I've never used it though. It was only supported in some sports games.
Also, the rubber "nipple" common on IBM and Toshiba laptops (amongst others)
has been around longer than the N64. I've seen them in "thumb-able" areas of
the laptops. And the CDTV had an analogue controller (which was also
wireless) as an optional extra.
quote:
>With regards to online console
>multiplayer, I stand corrected, the Dreamcast then was innovative.
There were online services on consoles as old as the Famicom too, you realise.
quote:
>With regards to the DS, it DEFINATELY is innovative. Cannot believe you are
>even trying to argue that one.
It does a lot of new things for a handheld console, but nothing technically
"new".
quote:
> I think you fail to understand what
>innovative means, the DS is a completely new experience, end of story.
New experience != innovative.
deKay
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+ Lofi Gaming - www.lofi-gaming.org.uk [Gamertag: deKay 01]
|- Gaming Diary - www.lofi-gaming.org.uk/diary/
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|- Hurry up and go touch it.
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