Gamepad

  Game controller  
A gamepad, also called joypad, is a type of game controller held with both hands and used to provide input for video games. Gamepads generally feature a set of action buttons handled with the right thumb and a direction controller handled with the left. The direction controller has traditionally been a four-way digital cross (D-pad), but most modern controllers additionally (or as a substitute) feature a small analog stick. The analog stick was introduced with the Emerson Arcadia controller. Most modern game controllers are a variation of a standard gamepad. Some common additions to the standard pad include shoulder buttons placed along the edges of the pad, centrally placed start, select, and mode buttons, and an internal motor to provide force feedback. Gamepads are also available for the PC, but are far less popular than the keyboard and mouse for the system except for a small segment of games. Milestones in gamepad history are that the Famicom controller introduced the D-Pad, the SNES introduced the Shoulder Buttons, and the Nintendo 64 controller introduced the Rumble Pak with an attachment. List of gamepads:

External Links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
s.p.o.c.k.
national roads authority
nationwide tour
john franklin enders
shrunken head
american mathematics competitions
american mathematics contest
dead man's hand
wild bill
pranab mukherjee
horse (disambiguation)
collinsville
fin (troll)
james francis stephens
history of pennsylvania
emily procter
olfactory receptor
clifford irving
puka
jin (linguistics)
woody island
jerzy szmajdzinski
edgewater, chicago
colonel sherman t. potter
science olympiad
roquefort sur soulzon
franciscan university of steubenville
zip line
radial keratotomy
children and family court advisory and support service
adam rodriguez
pound scots
apollyon
tony tether
makua
maria schicklgruber
united states national chemistry olympiad
giovanni lajolo
turbosilver
muluku
list of speeches
gorno altaisk
chlorphenamine
minepa