Alex_Mexico
Member
BY DEFAULT!!!!!
Do. Not. Say. Goldeneye (or Perfect Dark). That scheme needed two controllers and it wasn't a default setting.
Now that we got that out if the way, can you guys think of what was the very first console first person shooter that embraced the two sticks for moving and aiming?
My logic says it must've been during the PS2/GC/XB era but I forget the PS1 also had two sticks although few games utilized them because not everyone had them.
Personally my first FPS I ever played using two sticks was Halo: CE. And I disunity remember not being able to get my bearings and had to change the stick layout to Legacy so it controlled closer to Goldeneye. It wasn't until 2004 with Star Fox Assault, which lacked a Legacy option, that I forced myself to play with the now default twin stick shooter layout.
Except for playing inverted. I continue to play like that because back in the N64 days inverted was default, dammit.
So which game revolutionized gaming by adopting the control scheme that largely has remained the default one to this day?
Do. Not. Say. Goldeneye (or Perfect Dark). That scheme needed two controllers and it wasn't a default setting.
Now that we got that out if the way, can you guys think of what was the very first console first person shooter that embraced the two sticks for moving and aiming?
My logic says it must've been during the PS2/GC/XB era but I forget the PS1 also had two sticks although few games utilized them because not everyone had them.
Personally my first FPS I ever played using two sticks was Halo: CE. And I disunity remember not being able to get my bearings and had to change the stick layout to Legacy so it controlled closer to Goldeneye. It wasn't until 2004 with Star Fox Assault, which lacked a Legacy option, that I forced myself to play with the now default twin stick shooter layout.
Except for playing inverted. I continue to play like that because back in the N64 days inverted was default, dammit.
So which game revolutionized gaming by adopting the control scheme that largely has remained the default one to this day?