subject: Ces 2011: Power A's Air-controlled Air Flo Controllers, Xbox 360-style Mini Pro For Playstation 3 [print this page] We headed all the down to the MGM Grand to pay our buddies from accessory maker Power A, they usually display the content in your pipe-works to your buy wii controller, Ps3, X box 360 elite, in addition to the soon-to-be released 3DS. A beautiful mix of current and upcoming controllers and accessories were on display, between Lego Wii remotes to a new wide-angle sensor bar that made Nintendo's stock version seem as if a toy. Speaking of toys, I won't forget to the insightful actual Lego and Pokemon-branded accessories on display, which almost taught me to be feel like a young child again.
Unfortunately, the booze made short run that, but read on once the jump for one better analyze what hardcore Ps3 and cheap xbox 360 console controller fans can expect from Power A this year!
We graduated into the Air Flo Controller for the ps3 controller price and Ps3, which be like they got their start in the Tron universe, with stylish blue for the PS3 and neon-green for that Xbox versions. Solid rubber grips relating to the handles and analog sticks is the norm, that has a built-in cooling fan from the back and illuminated buttons wanting to provide through those most intense sessions. Both models are wired, which means that the experience is tethered to 10' areas.
Ps3 gamers seeking to get Xbox 360-style analog control probably will love this new Mini Pro Elite, which combines said Wii analog stick layouts with wireless control (via USB dongle) that's 25% less space-consuming than standard DualShock controllers. Concave trigger buttons and illumined action buttons may make this an absolute contender, designed for those intense first-person shooter marathons.
The Mini Pro EX is its corded cousin, and features precisely the same Xbox 360-style analog layout and rugged ergonomic molding, concave triggers, and illuminated buttons when the Elite. Except it's corded. And red.
From therapies seen we had been happy we went and Power A is unquestionably positioning themselves a third-party peripheral powerhouse in 2011, however news that we got to experiment with with Legos was plenty enough to do. Take a gander at a portion of the images below, and apologies to the 'concept logo' watermarks fitted; a technical snafu left our original snaps lost to history. Enjoy!