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Little touches like that make this a really worthwhile piece of kit. The layout of the stick works really well for All Stars, with the stick itself and the buttons separated a decent distance apart and the stick has a slanted top to ensure it remains comfortable even after hours. The buttons have a great spring to them that, while not as high quality as those in the Tournament Edition Street Fighter sticks, is certainly nothing to sniff at for the price this stick is on offer for. WWE All Stars does a downright fantastic job of recreating the all-out fun feeling of old Arcade Wrestling games with few of the frills of modern Wrestlers, and having the control method to match is great. The fast-paced nature of All Stars, which is covered in our review of the game, means that having all the function buttons placed in front of you is a real help in executing some of the moves. The stick is wired with a decent length cable and as mentioned earlier requires no setup to work in All Stars – so you can plug it straight in and go. The stick itself can be switched to input as the D-Pad, Left Stick or Right Stick, meaning the stick is suitable for multiple games past WWE All Stars, too – but the real question isn’t about the build of this largely-familiar stick – it’s about how it performs in WWE All Stars.
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Those buttons can also be locked out entirely with the flick of a switch. The stick also comes packed with a dual-speed turbo button, which lets you set the stick up to automatically hammer on any of the buttons for you, and has the now-traditional placement of Start and Select on the rear of the stick to stop you from accidentally pressing them. Unlike with some games and some sticks you won’t have to enter a control configuration menu and tell the game where you want the buttons mapped – just plug the stick into your console and you’re ready to go with no lengthy options to set up. The print is vibrant, colourful, and has a great glossy finish, which means it shouldn’t start looking worse for wear after a fair bit of use.Ī handy addition to the stick is the fact that it comes already configured for use with WWE All Stars. The first, and most obvious WWE-related change to the stick is the artwork, which features Triple-H and the Rock on the face in the stylistic art style of All Stars. These changes were also evident in the Wii FightStick that was released for Tatsunoko vs. Those familiar with the original Street Fighter sticks will recognize that the buttons feel sharper and more responsive when in-game and the stick itself feels tighter and springier than the sticks on the original sticks. While this is all a little technical, the difference is that the PCB and much of the stick internals have been greatly improved, the hardware inside revised to take more of a beating and to last longer even under worse stress. While the outside is identical, the inside has been significantly changed from the Street Fighter IV sticks to mark the years of improvement in the tech Mad Catz use. Mad Catz put out a regular stick and a ‘Tournament’ version, and this shares its case and design with the former. The shape of this stick is almost entirely identical to the cheaper Street Fighter IV Arcade Stick that was released around the same time as that game.
WWE ALL STARS BRAWL STICK PS3
The BrawlStick is the thing that has changed the most from its Street Fighter equivalent, a fully-featured Arcade FightStick with a ball-top joystick and eight face buttons that represent the four face buttons and the four triggers that are on the regular PS3 and 360 controllers.