Difference between revisions of "Avenue Pad 6"
From NEC Retro
m (Text replacement - "==Physical Scans==" to "==Physical scans==") |
m (Text replacement - "| madefor=" to "| type=Controller | madefor=") |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
| title= | | title= | ||
| maker=[[NEC Avenue]] | | maker=[[NEC Avenue]] | ||
+ | | type=Controller | ||
| madefor=[[PC Engine]] | | madefor=[[PC Engine]] | ||
| releases={{releasesPCE | | releases={{releasesPCE |
Revision as of 07:44, 2 April 2023
Avenue Pad 6 | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Made for: PC Engine | ||||||||||
Manufacturer: NEC Avenue | ||||||||||
Type: Controller | ||||||||||
|
The Avenue Pad 6 (アベニューパッド6) is an officially licensed six button controller for the PC Engine released in 1993 by NEC Avenue. It was designed specifically for Street Fighter II': Champion Edition, which was released a week later, although several other titles (mostly fighting games) also supported the controller.
The controller adds four additional buttons (Ⅲ, Ⅳ, Ⅴ and Ⅵ) in addition to the standard Ⅰ and Ⅱ buttons. The Ⅰ, Ⅱ and Ⅲ buttons are laid on the bottom row from right to left similar to the earlier Avenue Pad 3, whereas Ⅳ, Ⅴ and Ⅵ are laid out on the top row from left to right. The controller also has four switches: two turbo switches for buttons Ⅰ and Ⅱ, a slow motion switch, and a switch that toggles between two-button controls (A mode) and six-button controls (B mode).
Other six-button controllers for the PC Engine include the Fighting Commander PC by Hori, released a month later than the Avenue Pad 6, and the Arcade Pad 6 by NEC, which became the standard-issue controller for the PC Engine Duo-RX.
Physical scans
PC Engine |
---|
PC Engine (1987) | CoreGrafx (1989) | CoreGrafx II (1991) X1 Twin (1987) | PC-KD863G (1988) | Shuttle (1989) | GT (1990) | LT (1991) |
Add-Ons |
AV Booster (1988) | Interface Unit (1988) | Ten no Koe 2 (1989) | Backup Booster (1989) | Backup Booster II (1989) | Ten no Koe Bank (1991) | Memory Base 128 (1993) |