Product Details
Gamecube Microcon Wireless Controller (Colors May Vary)

Gamecube Microcon Wireless Controller (Colors May Vary)
From MadCatz

List Price: $19.99
Price: $17.20

Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Ships from and sold by Electronics Expo

21 new or used available from $13.49

Average customer review:

Product Description

MAD CATZ GMCUBE WIRELESS


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2754 in Video Games
  • Brand: Madcatz
  • Model: MOV 55686
  • Released on: 2005-08-01
  • Platform: GameCube
  • Subtitled in: German
  • Dimensions: 3.00" h x 9.00" w x 6.00" l, .50 pounds

Features

  • Two precision analog joysticks and shoulder buttons
  • Unblockable RF technology
  • 15% smaller, same big features
  • Colors May Vary

Customer Reviews

Does the job.3
I bought this as a Gamecube and Virtual Console controller for my Wii, with which it works very well. The controller functions right out of the box, is nicely responsive, and just works. Most of the buttons are solid enough, the thumb stick works very well, and the price was certainly right. The grips are hard plastic and the controller itself is lightweight.

After using it for a few weeks (and through two games, the excellent 'Beyond Good and Evil' and 'Metroid Prime'), I have two criticisms, both of which have been mentioned in Amazon reviews.

First, it is very small for an adult. While I don't worry too much about it being hard to reach the 'start' button (I'd rather not accidentally hit it, so I consider this a 'feature'), the A/B/X/Y buttons are very close together for my big thumb, and I'm always accidentally hitting the X button instead of the Y. The Left and Right shoulder buttons feel cheap, but they work well.

Second, after the beating I've given it with 'Metroid Prime', The analog sticks are (reasonably enough) starting to drift a bit.. (ED. After a bit of playing, I found if you unplug the wireless plug from the Wii, and then plug it back in, the controller recalibrates. Putting the Wii in standby mode doesn't do it, since the gamecube ports are still powered. Also, you must make sure the controller is switched on before you start the gamecube game, or the sticks will be off..)

All and all, it seems to be a decent product and unless the stick problem gets worse (ED. It's fine..) I'd definitely buy it for a younger child to beat up. Or if an extra $10 makes a big difference.

Edit, 4 months later: As time goes on, the joystick portion becomes less and less accurate and drifts badly.I'd drop my rating down to a 2 if I could. Good price, but not very rugged at all.

Good RPG... bad fighting.2
I'm a 16 year old male, but I have hands the size of a 7 year old. I can't really hold the bigger controllers comfortably, I'm ashamed to admit. I first played with one of these at a tournament for Super Smash Brothers Melee... I loved it. It was definately more comfortable. I went out a week later and bought one. Two days later, I discovered that the L button, was sticking. I'd sheild, and then I couldn't stop. Being my most used button, I couldn't get away with not using it. So, I returned it. My second one, lasted two weeks before my L button died.<_< I am now on my third(I returned the first two for a new one) controller. It's an ok controller, but I hit the L button two hard in Soul Caliber, and SSBM. I also noticed that the timing seemed a bit off(maybe just in my head, but I don't think so). Because I don't want to kill my controller again, I now only use it for RPG's... slower games, where I can be nice to my buttons.:) I use my older, bigger controller for SSBM and Soul Caliber. So, if you're playing games where timing, or precision are important, and you like to really slam on one button, I don't recomend this controller... big disapointment awaits you... but, if you're more of a, harvest moon, and fire emblem person(rpgs), then this would be a great controller.

For children, smaller children, I'd definately recomend this one. Like I said, it's a lot more comfortable and easy to use for smaller hands. So, it has it's pros, and cons<_< I hope this review was helpful.

Smaller Wireless3
There is just so much you can enjoy within a wireless controller. Mad Catz, has created some very well received controllers that have worked very well, but their wireless controller doesn't have the appeal I thought it was going to be. Although the controller is convient and smaller than the traditional Gamecube controller, but there are some problems this controller has. One of them is that there is no rumble feedback in the controller, and another one is that you have to reset the controller to neutral at times which is more often than should be. This isn't that bad, but if you want to go wireless, try gtting the wireless wavebird controller for the Gamecube instead.

Price: B-

Convience: C 1/2-

Overall: C