

- #Ps2 guitar hero wireless receiver not working Pc
- #Ps2 guitar hero wireless receiver not working simulator
- #Ps2 guitar hero wireless receiver not working ps2
I don’t think I ever used it to play Shredz64.Ī good friend of mine aquired a ps2-wireless-controller (aquired as in “person on street said it was broken and wanted to throw it away).
#Ps2 guitar hero wireless receiver not working simulator
I could connect those two and then play the guitar simulator with a plastic guitar (note to self: do a video on this). One of my DS already had a controller port I installed for playing Games with an Atari Joystick or leaving boring gameplay parts to a microcontroller. This connector port also proved helpful, when I got a “Guitar Simulator” for the Nintendo DS (“Jam Sessions”).
#Ps2 guitar hero wireless receiver not working ps2
Fun thing is: It still can be used as a wireless PS2 guitar. I’d only need something else for strumming. I planned on not needing the PSX64MK to play Shredz64, so the five fret buttons are connected as the C64 expect it. The second guitar (cheap wireless PS2) pretty quickly received a connector port. Unfortunately, good buttons are anything but cheap, so later on it was easier to buy a real PS2-set and use a converter.īut. So for quite some time, I only had Fretz on Fire without a guitar controller and thought about building my own game guitar from scrap material to save money. I got the game itself for 5 EUR – talk about a gateway drug).

It also supports a large number of songs without having to switch game discs (Although Rock Band 3 with the large number of DLC-songs seems to succeed in this.
#Ps2 guitar hero wireless receiver not working Pc
There are some workarounds: You can use PS2-hardware on the PC, using some USB-converter and Bluetooth-dongles allow Wiimotes (and therefore Wii-guitars) to be connected, thus making Fretz on Fire one of the most compatible games.įretz on Fire also has the added advantage of being right on the PC – without having to connect the video game console to a TV. Those are not exactly “completely” compatible: You cannot use a Wii or USB-Guitar with the Commodore64 for Shredz the Playstation guitars are incompatible with standard Wii games So whenever I choose one game, I instantly filter out some of the hardware. One problem is: My collection of guitar games also grew and spread over several systems. Today i received my next Wii Guitar (Les Paul) and I think about building “something” to store them and use less space. The first guitar was borrowed, the second one came with a PS2-game (Rock the eighties) and my collection has been growing ever since. Documentation about that is currently in my queue and will be online “at some point in the future”. I built an adapter (PSX64MK) for using PS2-Guitars on the C64 joystick port just to play it (basing on another adapter: PSX64). Ironically, it was Shredz64 that really drew me into it.

I guess, more than a dozen dancing mats have found their way to me over the years – and I still know that “someday” I will buy one of those sturdy metal Dance Pads to jump on.Īlong came Guitar Hero 3 and re-ignited my interest in this kind of game. When I first read about Dance Dance Revolution, I had to try it. As the other stuff isn’t online yet, you might wonder why I have a Wireless Game Guitar with a wire – or why I’d even want to change that. In this first “real” post, it already shows that this one bypasses a queue of other articles.
