steveobroil
Member
Hi modretro community! To be blunt I am here because I am a disabled gamer, meaning that the gamecube controller triggers with the springs are almost too tough for me to squeeze. I have taken the springs out which works great for Wii Virtual Console games as they don't use the analog (i think) setting of the L and R triggers.
Recently I purchased Zelda Windwaker and Zelda Ocarina of time gamecube discs. I went to play them with my controller that didn't have the springs and the L & R buttons are no longer responsive. My question is; is there a way for me to set it up so that I can swap it so that the analog sensor(?) picks up signal from the digital one (which if i haven't mixed them up, is the click down function on the controller). I'd prefer not to have to add the springs back into the controller as it is far too uncomfortable for me to play.
I am very sorry if my terminology is extremely noobish and I hope you can understand my question! I appreciate the help!
~Steveobroil
TL;DR Is there a way for the GC controller triggers to work on gamecube games without the springs that require the analog function (possibly swapping the digital signal to the analog one).
Recently I purchased Zelda Windwaker and Zelda Ocarina of time gamecube discs. I went to play them with my controller that didn't have the springs and the L & R buttons are no longer responsive. My question is; is there a way for me to set it up so that I can swap it so that the analog sensor(?) picks up signal from the digital one (which if i haven't mixed them up, is the click down function on the controller). I'd prefer not to have to add the springs back into the controller as it is far too uncomfortable for me to play.
I am very sorry if my terminology is extremely noobish and I hope you can understand my question! I appreciate the help!
~Steveobroil
TL;DR Is there a way for the GC controller triggers to work on gamecube games without the springs that require the analog function (possibly swapping the digital signal to the analog one).