games  anime  |  toys
This is a Dtoid readers's blog. For staff blogs click here. Confused? read this Create you own!  |   Members: Login now





Review: Thrustmaster T-Wireless Wii Controller
wonk | 6:52 PM on 02.03.2008 5 comments


Its been a long time since I have owned a Thrustmaster controller although I had several
for my Amiga back in the day. Strangely, I had never thought about that name before...

I have been looking round for a wireless controller for use with gamecube games on my Wii
as my wired controllers don't reach from the console to the couch (comfort is everything).
A wavebird would have done the trick but these days these run to about £25-30 for new
imported one and so I thought I would look around for a third party controller. As far as I
can tell, the T-wireless is the first and only third party wireless cube controller available,
and at £13 it was worth a try.

The controller itself is about the same size as a normal gamecube controller and it weighs
about the same with batteries. Unlike the wavebird it has rumble and has a switch on the
controller so you can turn rumble off to save on batteries. The controller uses three AAA
batteries and although I haven't done any definitive tests the battery life is unlikely to be
that great and I would personally have preferred a bit more weight and longer lasting AA
batteries.

My first impression was that the build quality wasn't as high as first party controllers, with
the battery contacts being a little out of alignment (but easily pushed into place) and the
cap on the receiver thing that plugs into the wii being loose.

The button layout is more or less the same as the SNES/classic controller but as it is a
gamecube controller there is no "select" button which is annoying if you are playing VC
games with it. The buttons felt solid enough, as did the decent sized d-pad (no problems on
pac-man).

The analogue sticks are a bit stiffer and springier than the classic controller and they don't
have those little groves to force you into into the eight directions. On the shoulders of the
controller, the Z buttons are above the L and R ones rather than inside like the classic
controller. The L and R buttons are simple buttons and don't have the travel-and-click
mechanism which might frustrate in games designed to treat the L and R as two buttons
rather than one.

Overall, the controller was worth the price and depending on your taste with regard to
button layouts, analogue sticks and rumble it might even be better that the wavebird.

Pros:
Half the price of a new imported wavebird, about the same as a classic controller.
Rumble that can be turned off on the controller.
No perceivable lag.
Comfortable shape and size.

Cons:
No "select" button.
No travel on shoulder buttons.
3 AAA batteries.

http://www.thrustmaster.com/product.aspx?ProductID=95&PlatformID=10



Attached photos:

Photo

Is this post awesome? Vote it up!

0


Comment with Facebook





Click connect and comment instantly!

Comment with Dtoid





New? SIGN UP - it takes 5 seconds

5 comments | showing # 1 to 5

prev next

Animated Trigger's Destructoid Blog
Not too shabby. I was looking into getting one of these myself due to the fact that Wavebirds are damn expensive, but have had no luck finding one around here..
Jonathan Kerr's Destructoid Blog
Thrustmaster is an awesome name.
Clockwork's Destructoid Blog
@Jonathan

Not to mention slightly arousing.
Eschatos's Destructoid Blog
Damnit, they took my potential porn star name.
wonk's Destructoid Blog
@trigger: I got my off Amazon.co.uk, haven't seen them in any shops though.

Also, I used to have "thrusthappy" as my email address, but it caused problems when I had to apply for jobs :(


prev next


Comment with Facebook





Click connect and comment instantly!

Comment with Dtoid





New? SIGN UP - it takes 5 seconds

Comments policy

Destructoid is an open discussion community. You don't need to "audition" to post a comment - just speak your mind. We respect differing opinions on the site, so have at it. Be smart, funny, insightful, clueless, or cute -- but back it up with substance. Keep your cool, keep it fun. We only ask that you act respectfully and above all: don't be a troll and ruin it for everyone else. Don't bring down gamers or we'll, you know, gently shoot you in the face and stuff you into a flaming mailbox. Each comment is your opportuntity to make this community awesomer. Is that even a word?

Avoiding the banhammer only requires common sense: spamming, trolling, racism, NSFW stuff, and other forms of sucking will not be tolerated. If anyone is griefing please report abuse. Be good. Don't suck!

 about me

I like video games.

I like living in London, UK.

I have a soft spot for Amiga classics:
* Exile
* Cannon Fodder
* Sensible Soccer
* Elite
* Speedball 2

At the moment I am spending too much time playing DS puzzlers.

 friends' updates
DtoidUK's Profile DtoidUK
Dtoid UK: We return from Eurogamer.


 

 
  get involved

register or login
post a blog
post a forum
enter a contest
contribute a news tip
suggest a feature
be a guest editor
support

new member's guide
login assistance
tech support
report abuse
email our editors
read our dev blog
nuclear crisis?
keep in touch

RSS feed
Twitter
Facebook
Myspace
Flickr
Game nights
Meetup+play online
seriously

about Destructoid
advertising
terms of use
privacy policy
jobs at MM
buy our crap
our network

Tomopop
Japanator
Despingation?




Destructoid is an independently-run publication forged by our love of video games and the gaming community's need of accountable enthusiast press
living the dream since March 16, 2006