I previously asked whether or not an arcade stick would help, and got a distinct yes. I was thinking about the EX2 cheap stick, and got a few recomendations for it if I was unsure, but what I mostly received was a mix of recommendations for the EX-SE and SFIV TE. I first got a SFIV TE, which broke in 5 minutes of use. I then found that a local store had the EX2 on sale, so I bought that along with a copy of Raiden Fighters Aces. Skip to today, where I have just got ESPGaluda 2, cannot possibly go back to shmupping on a standard 360 controller, and my EX2 is failing. The B button that I use for fire has begun sticking down. Supposedly, the PCB dies about a weak after this. The stick currently has gained an extra frame of input lag on all actions, sometimes more. I have a workaround by putting a small bit of paper around the pushbutton, but it won't keep it alive forever, and it doesn't make it register faster. Now, I'm wondering which stick to get when this one fails, or sooner. I'm currently looking at 5 sticks. I've made a brief summary of each, in no order at all:
Super Street Fight IV Tournament Edition S - SSFIV TE-S
Price: $132
The new and supposedly improved version of the existing TE, branded for super street fight IV. Sanwa parts, made by madcatz
pros:
all-sanwa out of the box.
warranty
wide
heavy
supposedly improved design
Cons:
weird button layout
its made by madcatz
I've had the normal TE fail on me before
Street Fighter IV Tournament Edition - SFIV TE
Price: $130
The older edition of the TE, branded for street fighter IV. Sanwa parts, made by madcatz
pros:
all-sanwa out of the box.
warranty
wide
heavy
Cons:
weird button layout
its made by madcatz
about 20% failure rate
Real Arcade Pro EX - HRAP EX
price: $124
The HRAP, no branding. Hori parts, made by hori
pros:
cheapest 8 button stick
low failure rate
cons:
hori parts
Real Arcade Pro EX-SE - HRAP EX-SE
price: $140
pros:
seimitsu parts
low failure rate
best customer reviews
cons:
most expensive
Fighting Stick EX2 - EX2
price:$50
pros:
cheapest
cons:
low grade hori parts
low durability
small
When responding to the poll, please select one answer as to which stick to get, and one answer as to when to get that stick.
Here is what this post originally was, so the that things make sense:
My current keyboard, while just fine for typing, is currently breaking in an odd manner. Currently, I cannot move down and right at the same time, and if I hold shift, I cannot move up and right. Holding the right key will prevent the other key from registering, nor can the keyboard recognize more than 3 keys held at once. I have never experienced problems with either of these limitations, or even noticed their existence, until I began playing shmups. I have another keyboard in my closet that works very well for typing, but it is almost completely unsuitable for gaming, and I bought this keyboard a while ago so I could use it for PC gaming, before I got into shmups. I was wondering if getting a cheap arcade stick would be worth the cost, especially since I know a lot of fighting game fans and I am frequently asked for battles by them.
I'm not going to need a top quality arcade stick, and was looking at this stick in particular. Its cheap, and it looks like it would work well for both shmups, which are my main interest, and fighting games, which I will almost certainly have to play occasionally. Though it is only a 6 button stick as opposed to an 8 button, and I've heard that the buttons and stick are a bit too sensitive for most people, and I've heard of some people even ordering special parts because the ones it came with weren't good enough, it looks like what I want as is.
Poll question: Should I get this arcade stick?
Results for that poll:
No, just get a new keyboard 9% 9% [ 2 ]
No, get a different stick (please say which) 52% 52% [ 12 ]
Yes, that one will work 39% 39% [ 9 ] x