Video Game Controllers Dismantled

By | on 20th January 2012 | 0 Comment

Video games and PCBs

Have you ever been playing a video game and wondered how pressing a button on the controller in your hand can make the character on screen perform a certain action? Whether it’s the 16 bit glory days of the Sega Mega Drive and Super Nintendo (SNES) or the advanced powerful machines of today such as the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One, people have been enjoying playing video games for years. The electronic manufacture involved in designing and producing the different controllers over the years has greatly improved as more buttons are included and different input methods are designed. Here’s a look at how video game controllers work and images of old dismantled controllers so you can see the PCB, circuitry and other parts that are contained within the plastic casings of some of our favourite game controllers.

 

SNES controller pcb

Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) controller

pcb from wii remote

Nintendo Wii remote PCB

 

Buttons and controllers and PCBs

The buttons and sticks on the outside of the controller are what the user presses to make their character jump, kick a ball, fire a gun or accelerate on screen. The microprocessor communicates with the console to turn these instructions into onscreen actions but it’s the communication between the microprocessor and the PCB that lets the processor know which button is being pressed.

 

Controlling the circuit board

Changes to the circuit board are made as the different buttons or control sticks are pressed or moved, which controls the flow of electricity. So when you press the A button on the outside of a controller to make your character jump, the button inside presses a rubber dome switch onto the PCB and completes the circuit, informs the processor which circuits are complete and therefore knows which button has been pressed. To put it simply, the circuits are either open or closed.

 

From a button to your character onscreen

So next time you are making Mario jump on a Koopa Troopa or reloading your gun as you prepare to storm a compound in Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare, now you know how the controller in your hands is telling the onscreen character what to do, and it’s all because of the PCB.

Philip King
As a technology enthusiast, Philip King is the director of PCB Train and Newbury Electronics. Philip first joined Newbury Electronics in 1981 as an accountant and in 1987 partnered with Kevin Forder as a managing director.
Philip King

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