Monday, March 22, 2010

JogCon vs NeGCon, which one is the best/weirdest

From now on, I’ll try to blog at least once a week about gaming, mostly about retro-gaming and obscure gaming subjects.

Even tho blogging is supposed to be out compared to Twitter and Facebook, I consider this as a writing exercise. And maybe I can interest some people in that stuff.

Recently, I’ve been able to get my hands on a Namco NeGCon controller. Back in the PS1 era, Namco had a popular racing game series called Ridge Racer (which still exists to this day but has been less high profile in the recent consoles). It is more of an arcade racer than a simulation, like Gran Turismo and Forza. We’re talking high speeds and drifts that don’t make any sense. I already had some Ridge Racer titles, including a special edition of Rige Racer Type 4, which came with the JogCon.

First up was the NegCon with Ridge Racer (RR1), the first, straight port of the arcade. Right of the bat, I must say the controller is really simple and when playing, only 2 buttons are used (even if while playing RR1, I used only one): Acceleration and Brakes. Even better, they are pressure sensitive, which was pretty unusual in the PS1 days.

One thing hits you when first play with the NegCon: you have no idea of the how far you have to twist to turn the way you like and you are clueless on which direction you car will take on the first turn. You either get it right or you hit the opposite wall. Once past the first turn, you’ll need a race lap to get the hang of it. The twist motion becomes natural and is insanely precise. I even had a friend who is more of a sport gamer (mainly baseball, basketball, and football) and he had a pretty good first race and finished second. He actually liked how the controller worked!

While he was there, we decided to test the JogCon. First issue: early PS1 games are not compatible with it. Since it came with Ridge Racer Type 4 (RR4), we decided to test the controller with it. Then you have to find a comfortable position for your hands to use the dial while still firmly holding the controller. A good point: the force feedback is really strong when you take into account the size of the controller. It’s big for a PS1 controller but nothing excessive.

The learning curve with this controller is much bigger than the NeGCon. The force feedback really messes with the way a person would normally play those games. You hold the dial with 3 fingers max. This is not a full steering wheel with force feedback that you hold with 2 hands. The first time the force feedback kicks, the dial almost jumps out of your hand. It’s weird at first, then you try to drift and it gets just plain awkward. The force feedback will kick in one, direction then the opposite, then back again when trying to get the car straight. To perform, you must not make any mistakes, not even the slightest one.

I can see myself getting used to that controller but it would take time. Time that I don’t have considering that I don’t specialize in drift racing games. I don’t feel like spending 2 hours to master a track in a Ridge Racer, assuming it is one that is compatible with it. I haven’t tested it with other titles, but I’m fairly sure that not a lot of titles were compatible with the JogCon.

The NegCon on the other hand seem to work with pretty much any racing game. To make the test even, I tried the Grand Prix mode in RR4 and finished it within an hour and only had to redo one race (finished second and had to finish first in that one).

Not long after finding a NeGCon, I read on a gaming forum that playing with it was bliss. I had trouble believing that because, let’s be honest, it looks like a broken controller. It twists right in the middle! How weird could it be to play with it? I believe now and will challenge anyone to try it and see for themselves.

Both pictures are from www.joypadgame.com. I do not own them, they just had the best picture of the controllers.

5 comments:

Kidhasaces said...

I was that friend trying the remotes and indeed the Negcon was awesome, the JogCon was real hard to control or didnt feel necessarily smooth. But it was the first time I had seen either remotes and did enjoy to try them. Vintage man is the way to go

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Anonymous said...

10 Years After... ;) (nice music by the way)
I thought you were supposed to use the central wheel of the Jogcon just with your two thumbs ! You use then the triggers to accelerate/brake...

ckwrst said...

I'm really late to the party here. I unlocked everything with the negecon. I beat the devil car as well. Playing with it is bliss. I haven't tried the jogcon yet but the negecon is probably.my favorite peripheral of all time.