koam said:I'd like to bring to the court my surprise witness and proper way of holding an NES controller:
#4
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The index fingers go behind the controller.
There are still people out there who call game cartridges "tapes." Wouldn't be surprised if they did it with disc-based games, too.Thaedolus said:Here's a better question: who calls their controllers paddles? Come on Hito, I know you're one of them...
jiji said:There are still people out there who call game cartridges "tapes." Wouldn't be surprised if they did it with disc-based games, too.
Tsubaki said:Yeah... #3s are winning by a landslide for the reasons mentioned. Games from NES to even today require holding down one button while hitting another. There is no other option.
shidoshi said:I had a friend who used to play NES games with the controller backward.
Let's see if I can explain this. Have the controller in front of you, facing away from you, so that the cord hangs down on the bottom. Put both hands on top of the controller (the controller's actual bottom), with your hands draped over it, so that your thumbs press against the back of the controller, and your fingers can reach the dpad and buttons. He played like that, with the controller facing away from him the entire time.
koam said:I'd like to bring to the court my surprise witness and proper way of holding an NES controller:
#4
![]()
The index fingers go behind the controller. Putting them on top (Snes-style) will hurn your fingers on an NES pad. Also, the left hand is positioned horizontally in #4 not vertically which makes more sense since you run left/right more often then you do up/down (you tilt your thumb a bit up/down to press up/down).
Fuzzy said: