Anyone out there with the knowhow or the knowwhere?
Genesis/Megadrive to USB Looking for a Controller Adapter
#1
Posted 12 December 2011 - 11:37 PM
I've been holding off on doing this for a while, but I want to build my dream machine. I want to build a computer with all sorts of emulators, and have the original controllers for each one. I've got NES to USB, I've got SNES to USB, but I can't seem to find a reasonably priced Megadrive/Genesis to USB solution online.
Anyone out there with the knowhow or the knowwhere?
Anyone out there with the knowhow or the knowwhere?
#3
Posted 13 December 2011 - 10:26 AM
Sik, on 13 December 2011 - 05:57 AM, said:
...the SNES adapter seems to be almost twice as expensive o_o;
#4
Posted 13 December 2011 - 10:38 AM
Might the higher (than I expected) price be due to its being marketed as Genesis-specific? That type of 9-pin DIN is by no means proprietary, so it may be that you could find the same thing cheaper from some other source selling it a generic adaptor. (Of course, I'm probably wrong)
#5
Posted 13 December 2011 - 11:32 AM
The problem is that the Mega Drive and USB protocols are completely incompatible with each other, period. In order to make such an adapter work you need to slap a microcontroller that behaves like an USB device and takes its input from the MD port. That's from where the high price comes, you're literally buying a whole new device, not just an adapter.
If you can go the LPT route then try that because that's much cheaper, since that's truly just an adapter (rewiring, no microcontroller in the way). It needs custom drivers though.
If you can go the LPT route then try that because that's much cheaper, since that's truly just an adapter (rewiring, no microcontroller in the way). It needs custom drivers though.
#6
Posted 13 December 2011 - 12:58 PM
Well...there's always this...
It plays Genesis/Super Nintendo games, with their original controllers via the original ports, and lets you play the games via a computer emulator through the actual cartridge. You can even make backups of your data and save to the cartridge!!
It plays Genesis/Super Nintendo games, with their original controllers via the original ports, and lets you play the games via a computer emulator through the actual cartridge. You can even make backups of your data and save to the cartridge!!
#8
Posted 14 December 2011 - 08:01 AM
Sik, on 13 December 2011 - 11:32 AM, said:
If you can go the LPT route then try that because that's much cheaper, since that's truly just an adapter (rewiring, no microcontroller in the way). It needs custom drivers though.
Out of need for a decent PC gamepad several years ago, I built a Playstation controller adapter out of spare parts and never looked back. I was even able to get the DPadPro drivers working in Windows 7, though my primary system still runs XP. A Genesis adapter is even easier to build. All you need is a DB25 connector, some diodes, and moderate skill with a soldering iron. Cost in parts is probably around $15 maximum.
Of course this all assumes your dream machine has a parallel port or that you're not limited to USB input for any other reason. Just putting it out there.
#9
Posted 14 December 2011 - 12:12 PM
Use ParallelPortJoystick instead of DpadPro for MD stuff. DpadPro adapter is unnecesairly complex and does not work well with 6 button controllers.
#13
Posted 14 December 2011 - 07:35 PM
That's a playstation 1 PCB mounted onto the back of a Genesis controller, with all the connections you'd need soldered. A PSone compatible cable comes out, and either a real PS1/2 or a USB adapter can be used with it.
#14
Posted 14 December 2011 - 08:33 PM
Bibin, on 14 December 2011 - 07:35 PM, said:
That's a playstation 1 PCB mounted onto the back of a Genesis controller, with all the connections you'd need soldered. A PSone compatible cable comes out, and either a real PS1/2 or a USB adapter can be used with it.
I suspected it was something like that. That's pretty awesome bro. Might just do something like that myself.
#15
Posted 15 December 2011 - 11:20 AM
Sik, on 13 December 2011 - 05:57 AM, said:
This?
It annoys me the adapter is more expensive than the controller itself, but that seems to be true for all the other adapters they have =| And the SNES adapter seems to be almost twice as expensive o_o;
It annoys me the adapter is more expensive than the controller itself, but that seems to be true for all the other adapters they have =| And the SNES adapter seems to be almost twice as expensive o_o;
I have one of these, and in my experience, it does not work properly with several games, including all the Sonic PC games; the d-pad gets treated as both a d-pad and the trigger buttons, and the trigger buttons get treated as UDLR buttons. I have to assign actions to the d-pad to get them to work on the trigger buttons. It works with emulators, JoyToKey and WindowsZone though.

