Video: Mad Catz doles out Modern Warfare 2 controllers for young (and old) whippersnipers

If Infinity Ward’s own Prestige Edition of Modern Warfare 2 isn’t enough to satisfy your lust for custom hardware, Mad Catz is ready to pick up the slack with no less than ten MW2-branded peripherals. The crown jewel to the set will be the Combat Controller, which will have a couple of extra buttons, but more importantly, is likely the controller Robert Bowling was tweeting about last month. Come this November, you’ll also be able to talk smack via a Throat Communicator on the 360 or a more mundane Bluetooth Headset on the PS3, add Skinz to your controllers and Microsoft console, and even your neglected PC can be enriched with an Elite Keyboard and Sniper Mouse combo.

Update: IGN has been first to preview the full plethora of goods, and we’ve got the video for you after the break (Thanks, quasar).

[Via Joystiq]

Continue reading Video: Mad Catz doles out Modern Warfare 2 controllers for young (and old) whippersnipers

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Video: Mad Catz doles out Modern Warfare 2 controllers for young (and old) whippersnipers originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 26 Aug 2009 04:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Logitech’s $300 G27 racing wheel gives sidelined DUI possessors a taste of the road

Eager to get back on the track, but not so eager to ease up on the sauce? Fret not, our continually inebriated friends, as Logitech has just the answer for your awfully depressing road woes. The long-awaited successor to the original G25 racing wheel is finally on the scenes, as the G27 brings along real metal, real leather and a real taste of driving that can likely only be mimicked whilst seated in some sort of $30k+ sportster. The wheel is designed to function with Sony’s PS2 and PS3 as well as Windows-based PCs, and aside from the built-in force feedback mechanism, you’ll also find a pair of stainless steel shifter paddles, RPM / shift indicator lights and a clutch that fully supports heel-and-toe downshifting. Is all that realism worth $299.99? Judge with your wallet come September.

Continue reading Logitech’s $300 G27 racing wheel gives sidelined DUI possessors a taste of the road

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Logitech’s $300 G27 racing wheel gives sidelined DUI possessors a taste of the road originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 17 Aug 2009 04:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IntensaFIRE chip adds programmable / rapid fire modes to Xbox 360 controllers

The hardcore modders in attendance need not apply unless they’re looking for a quick jaunt down easy street, but those terrified of solder guns, glue and screwdrivers best listen up. A newly formed company, BGRMODS, has just introduced its very product, and it’s pretty much a must-have for Xbox 360 owners. IntensaFIRE is an easy-to-install chip (we’re talking five minutes, tops) that modifies the Xbox 360 wireless controller in order to enable 5-mode sleeper settings (including a customizable user programmable mode) as well as a rapid-fire mode that should finally compensate for your lack of skill in Call of Duty 4. Hit the read link for the specifics on installation (trust us, there ain’t much to do), and get ready to upgrade your game on September 7th for $29.99.

[Via TestFreaks, thanks Vincent]

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IntensaFIRE chip adds programmable / rapid fire modes to Xbox 360 controllers originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Aug 2009 10:43:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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OpenChord allows actual guitars to play Guitar Hero, sound atrocious

You’ve heard that saying “so close, yet so far away,” right? This, folks, is why that very quote exists. The obviously brilliant team over at OpenChord has designed a system that enables an honest-to-goodness guitar to sync up with Nintendo’s Wii in order to play Guitar Hero. You simply plug the Wiimote into the axe and use the bona fide strings and frets in place of those plastic buttons you’re so used to using. The only problem? Guitar Hero wasn’t designed for use with six strings and 22 to 24 frets, and man, does it show. Hop on past the break to have a listen, and yes, your dreams of actually taking advantage of this will be shattered. Bet on it.

[Via Joystiq]

Continue reading OpenChord allows actual guitars to play Guitar Hero, sound atrocious

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OpenChord allows actual guitars to play Guitar Hero, sound atrocious originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 07 Aug 2009 09:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Screen Grabs: DJ Hero makes cameo in Kid Cudi video, comes back full circle

Screen Grabs chronicles the uses (and misuses) of real-world gadgets in today’s movies and TV. Send in your sightings (with screen grab!) to screengrabs at engadget dt com.


Something very peculiar popped up while we were watching Kid Cudi’s “Make Her Say” music video. Just as the song is winding down, Mr. Cudi (also known as Scott Mescudi) can be seen “air scratching” while someone in the above frame takes the pantomime one step further with DJ Hero‘s turntable peripheral. The connection runs much deeper, though: the song was produced by Kanye West, whose rise to fame arguably came when he produced Jay-Z’s critically acclaimed album The Blueprint… and Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter, in turn, happens to be one of the two artists (along with Eminem) promoting DJ Hero. Funny how that works out. Video after the break, and jump to the 3:03 mark if all you really want is another glimpse of the controller.

[Thanks, Laxuo and AG Beast]

Continue reading Screen Grabs: DJ Hero makes cameo in Kid Cudi video, comes back full circle

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Screen Grabs: DJ Hero makes cameo in Kid Cudi video, comes back full circle originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 05 Aug 2009 22:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sony’s red and blue DualShock 3 controllers land in October, love this country

We know what you want: you want entirely too many photos of some new DualShock 3 controllers in a variety of non-compromising positions. The real kicker? These two controllers are “Deep Red” and “Metallic Blue,” the most American of all the colors. And you do, like America, right citizen? Right. Now click through to that gallery like the Productive Member of Society #48-J12 that you are. Sony should have these on the market this October, for you to spend your hard earned money dollars on and attain the True Happiness due to every citizen consumer.

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Sony’s red and blue DualShock 3 controllers land in October, love this country originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Jul 2009 17:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Sonos CR200 Touchscreen Controller Review: Better Than an iPhone

The next-gen touchscreen Sonos controller is here, and as strange as it seems to say, it’s actually better than the Sonos app for iPhone/iPod Touch for controlling their multi-room music solution wirelessly. But it is expensive.

The CR200 is available by itself for $350 and as part of the Sonos 250 Bundle for $1000. You save a little bit on the bundle since the ZonePlayer 120 and ZonePlayer 90 are $500 and $350, respectively. If you’re not familiar with Sonos, it’s basically a very fancy (and expandable) Airport Express-like unit to get music throughout your house. Our previous review of the last gen ZP80 was good, but the ZP90 and ZP120—this gen—are much better. They’re both capable of streaming music either over your network, or wirelessly through a $100 ZoneBridge unit.

The main competitor to the Sonos controller isn’t actually the last-generation Sonos controller, it’s the free iPhone/iPod Touch app. With an iPod Touch coming in at $230 ($120 less than the CR200), using that to manage your music or internet radio and piping that through different rooms in your house seems like the natural (and cheaper) choice, seeing as the thing also doubles as an iPod Touch when not controlling your rig. Why would someone want to use the CR200? Because it’s good.

Somehow Sonos managed to get the multitouch as responsive and as usable as the iPhone. Scrolling, flicking and even typing are taken directly from Apple’s user interface designs, and thus, should be instantly familiar to just about everyone now. The screen is bright, and the blue theme throughout the controller is classy—unlike the blue iPhone app, which is just slightly tacky looking.

Click for gallery

But that’s not why it’s better. It’s better because it’s got a better user interface. You can arrange songs, adjust volume, configure zones, jump back into the Zones menu, adjust your queue, and do just about everything faster than you can on the iPhone app. Getting where you want to go takes fewer clicks. Sonos decided to put more effort into the CR200 (probably because it’s not free in the app store) in order to drive sales of the controller, and it shows. It’s not as if you can’t do the same things on the iPhone app, you just can’t do them as well or as fast.

The downside to the CR200 is that its battery doesn’t last all that long, so you need to remember to dock it whenever you’re done using it. You can leave it in your living room or your bedroom or wherever and it’ll sync wirelessly to any ZonePlayers or ZoneBridges you have around your house. The range is fantastic, and has no problems penetrating three stories-worth of floors and walls to control music.

Basically, the CR200 controller is exactly what you’d expect from Sonos. The whole full-house music streaming still has that distinct taste of being futuristic, even though the prices are down to somewhat reasonable levels now. Given a few more years for prices to drop and for these things to be integrated at the builder and installer level for new homes, it’ll become as ubiquitous as CAT5 wiring is now.

The Sonos CR200 is great at what it does and it’s super easy to use, but it’s still pretty damn pricey at $350. Sonos knows what kinda customers they’re looking for: people with the extra money to outfit their house, Bill Gates style, with music in every room. No mere Airport Express would be enough for them, they want quality and they’re not afraid to spend a little bit more for it. And that’s the CR200. [Sonos]

Bright, very usable touchscreen


Better UI than the free iPhone/iPod Touch app


Good range, battery life


Costs $350

Infinity Ward lending a hand on Modern Warfare 2 controller?

Time Crisis fans fully understand the awesomeness of a good gun when playing a gun-based title, so those very gamers will likely grasp the significance of Robert Bowling’s Modern Warfare 2-related tweet. Just yesterday, the Infinity Ward employee made clear that he was “in a design meeting for a Modern Warfare 2 controller,” and he sought the input of the Twitterverse regarding “concave or convex grips for the analog sticks.” If you’ll recall, this title can already be secured with an actual pair of night vision goggles, so tossing in some sort of rifle or semiautomatic weapon would just sweeten the pot even further — chances are, though, this is just gonna be modeled after the plain jane Xbox 360 pad. When contacted by our pals over at Joystiq, Bowling wouldn’t elaborate much, only noting that the controller “isn’t being manufactured by [Infinity Ward] or [Activision].” So, that means it is being manufactured though, right?

[Via Joystiq]

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Infinity Ward lending a hand on Modern Warfare 2 controller? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 21 Jul 2009 09:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Special edition Mad Catz Street Fighter IV controllers set for limited engagement at Comic-Con

Heading to Comic-Con this year? If not, you’ll be missing out on a limited edition Street Fighter IV-branded FightSticks and FightPads from Mad Catz, with button layouts designed to maximize your hadouken-throwing efficiency and with a design the Joystiq crew labels as inspired by Sagat (the character) — a perfect complement to your Tournament Edition sticks. According to Capcom’s official blog, only 500 of each have been made, divided evenly between PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. The pad will cost you $49.99, the sticks $179.99, and the online auction resale value guaranteed to be even more.

[Via Joystiq]

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Special edition Mad Catz Street Fighter IV controllers set for limited engagement at Comic-Con originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 20 Jul 2009 20:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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HORI’s revamped TwinStick EX: fit for Virtual On addicts only

We’ll admit, that cheap-o Virtual On mod we peeked earlier this year was pretty stellar, but those obsessed with the anime-themed title are likely tired of using a hacked up Xbox 360 gamepad in order to advance from stage to stage. If you’ve found yourself in that increasingly narrow niche, HORI has a fine piece you should feast your eyes upon. The refreshed TwinStick EX was designed specifically for Microsoft’s latest console and to be used specially with Virtual On. The result? A ¥30,000 ($325) joystick that you’ll probably never quite justify the purchase of to your significant other. Get your pre-orders in early; we get the feeling these are bound to sell out.

[Thanks, Marv]

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HORI’s revamped TwinStick EX: fit for Virtual On addicts only originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Jul 2009 08:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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