PS3 Wireless Keypad

In an incredible turn of events, Sony has announced that its wireless keypad for PS3 will be hitting stores on November the 28th priced at £24.99. Should come in handy for chatting during games and the like.
This handy piece of hardware, unleashed during the Leipzig Games Convention, clips into Sixaxis and DualShock 3 controllers and apparently looks a bit like a Blackberry keyboard.

It also includes a touch-pad, like a laptop, that handles mouse input - which should make using the PS3 web-browser much easier.

On top of that, there are shortcut buttons for quick access to Communication and Message Box, ensuring navigation is short and snappy. Cool!

PS3 Gadgets

If you have a PS3 then these are the gadgets you should look at buying to get the most from your machine.

Official Sony Blu-ray Remote for PS3 - £15

While the PS3 might be trailing the Xbox 360 in the sales wars, it has got one thing over it for sure: it's a much, much lovelier media centre. It's a better-looking piece of hardware (its massive size aside), it's near-silent when not running a game, it's blessed with some of the finest SD to HD upscaling there is and of course there's that Blu-Ray drive.

No need for a separate DVD drive or a media centre PC when you've got one of these. You will need a remote though, and Sony's official effort is the best one around.

Large and robust with an absolute wealth of buttons, you wouldn't guess it was designed for a console rather than a dedicated piece of AV kit. Best of all, it's Bluetooth - which means line of sight to the console isn't required.

So hide the PS3 away in a cupboard and keep your guests guessing. Oh - and don't be fooled by the name. The remote works with any media file or disc the console can play.


PS3 Keyboard

Yep, any old keyboard - just as long as it's USB rather than olde worlde PS/2.

The PS3's web browser ain't half bad, but hopping around the internet with a game pad is a bit like juggling with your feet.

What's not entirely well known is that you can plug in a keyboard and then use the browser as you would one on a PC. You can also navigate around the PS3's interface with the cursor keys if you so desire.

If you're feeling really fruity, PS3-specific Bluetooth models are available - they're pricey, but they match the console and they're wireless. Logitech have an especially nice one.


Extra PS3 hard drive - £33

Unlike the 360's irksome and expensive proprietary jobbies, you can swap the PS3's built-in hard drive for a standard laptop drive.

120Gb and upwards models go for as little as around £30 these days, so you can have yourself a console that can store a metric crapton of movies and PSN downloads very cheaply.

Very easily too - it's a 20 minute job that just requires a bit of screwdriver work, and the console itself will walk you through formatting the drive once it's in.

The guide here will sort you out. Just be sure you get the right drive in the first place - it needs to be 2.5-inch in size, and with a SATA (not IDE) connection.


HDMI (male) to DVI (female) adapter - Around £4

If the family is using the telly in the lounge you're left in the gaming cold. Unless you lug the PS3 off to your bedroom or study and connect it to your PC's monitor... only to find it doesn't have the outputs.

You can buy cheap VGA cables for the 360, but matters are a little more complicated for the PS3, which doesn't natively support it.

There's an easier, and even cheaper way to plug it into a monitor though - an adapter that converts the PS3's standard HD connection, HDMI, into the DVI standard. HDMI is just a smaller version of DVI with an added audio signal, y'see.

So grab one of these from eBay or a hardware store such as Maplin, plug it into the PS3's HDMI output, then just connect the monitor's HDMI cable to it


PS2 Memory Card Adapter - £8.50

Only of use if you've got one of the earlier, non-crippled PS3s with full Playstation 2 backwards compatibility support, but this is pretty much a must-have if you do.

With it, you can transfer all your old PS2 saves and whatnot onto the PS3's hard drive - so you won't have to lose that GTA Vice City 100 per cent completion save after all. You can also pick up a similar thing for PS1 memory cards.


Gioteck RealTriggers - £3.50

The Playstation gamepad remains a design classic, but action games' more or less standardised use of the main shoulder buttons means it's a little lacking.

The PS3 controller's 'triggers' are near flat, making it sometimes tricky to keep a full grip on 'em. These plug-on doodads transform the buttons into something agreeably chunkier - so you get both a more secure fit and something that feels a little more like pulling a gun trigger.


Sony Dualshock 3 - £30

Graah - famously, the PS3's Sixaxis controller lacked any of the vibration/rumble goodness that we've come to expect over the last couple of console generations. Realising they'd made a boo-boo, Sony finally caved and came up with this new pad.

It's annoying you have to fork out separately, and that only more recent games support it, but if you're in the market for a second controller, look no further than this classically designed beauty.


Hori Arcade Fighting Stick - £38

We featured the 360 version of this in our round-up of 10 essential peripherals for Microsoft's console, but it's also available on PS3.

As this was the first console home of Virtua Fighter 5, has Tekken Dark Resurrection on PSN and Street Fighter IV inbound, a good fighting stick is perhaps even more of necessity than it is for the 360.

A chunky stick and big, thumpable buttons give you the arcade edge you'll need in any fighting game.

There are two versions of the fighting stick - a straight, svelte one, and one plastered with Soul Calibur V artwork. The latter's the more garish, but can usually be found a bit cheaper.



Splitfish FragFX Wired Controller - £40

And if you want a similar edge in first-person shooters, look no further than this bizarre hunk of plastic.

It's a gamepad/mouse hybrid that emulates the rodent 'n' keyboard experience that habitual PC gamers require to excel at FPSes.

Technically, it could be considered cheating, but so far as the console knows you're just using a standard Sixaxis pad.

Your lefthand uses a standard thumbstick to move and strafe, and the right moves a customised mouse around to control your targeting.

The mouse even has the beloved Playstation facebuttons built into the side.



ShootpadBig Ben Shootpad - £49

This is either the football equivalent of those driving range-simulating toys that high-powered executives buy, or the worst idea in the world. It's possibly both.

As well as a one-handed control, this piece of peculiar madness includes an elasticised mini-football affixed to a special mat - the idea being that you actually kick the ball in PES, FIFA or whatever, rather than simply push a button.

Just like real football, but not. Surely it can only go horribly wrong - but don't deny that you desperately want to give it a go.


Play TV - £60

That cheeky PS3 - it's totally a PC in disguise as a games console.

There's no stronger proof than this TV tuner add-on, which turns the cumbersome darling into a fully-functional Freeview box, further cementing its status as a media centre par excellence.

Not only that, but it can record shows and do the pausing live TV thing - and it can stream any of it over to your PSP.

You too can live the watching Eastenders on the beach dream. Though we do recommend having better dreams, frankly.



Bluetooth wireless headset - £9

There's voicecomms support in most online PS3 games, but Sony doesn't provide a headset along with the console, annoyingly.

Fortunately, it supports many standard Bluetooth earpieces, so if you've got one for your mobile phone you may find it plays nice with the console too.

Alternatively, you can pick one up for less than a tenner - don't worry about it being an official Sony model or not, just as long as it says it does work with the PS3.

A third option is to pick up the not-bad online shooter Warhawk, which has a headset stuffed into the box.

COD5 Zombie Mode

Call of Duty World at War (CoD 5) is release today finally. My PS3 game is in the post.

Check out this COD5 unlockable zombie mode that pits you and up to three of your CoD buddies against an army of the undead.

World at War Zombie Mode Video


How to open COD5 Zombine Mode?
  • Play through the hole game of Call of Duty World at War
  • Watch the credits roll
  • Then try to survive the intense fanatical onslaught of the Nazi zombies.
The Zombie Bonus Mode Trailer gives a glimpse of the unlockable bonus mode that can be played solo or with up to 3 friends via Co-Op. Accumulate points to open new sections and purchase weapon upgrades and ammo - which will be needed to fight off waves of Zombies that gain strength as the action escalates. Cool!

PS3 2.52 Update

Fire up those Internet connections, PlayStation 3 owners. Sony is once again about to indulge in its favorite pasttime - firmware updates.

Over on PlayStation.Blog, they're announcing that the newest update will bring the PS3 to version 2.52, though the actual changes are relatively few and far between. This time around, the playback quality of some of the PS3 format software has been improved, and a text entry problem with has been addressed.

So if either your keyboard or your playback quality were suspect, it sounds like you're in luck. And if nothing else, there's just something satisfying about seeing that little firmware number get a tiny bit higher.

PS3 Wiimote

Sony patents 'Wiimote for PS3' - Motion-sensing technology for the PlayStation? Rumours that Sony is preparing to take on Nintendo's motion-sensing Wii controller have been revived after the PlayStation 3 (PS3) maker filed a patent for a technology that uses ultrasonic waves to track a player in 3D space.

According to a patent filing, the technology includes a "game interface tracks the position of one or more game controllers in 3-dimensional space using hybrid video capture and ultrasonic tracking system".

"The captured video information is used to identify a horizontal and vertical position for each controller within a capture area," continues the report. "The ultrasonic tracking system analyses sound communications to determine the distances between the game system and each controller and to determine the distances among the controllers."

The controller also fits together in a variety of combinations, much like the Menacer light gun peripheral for the Sega Genesis in the early 1990s. The original break apart PS3 controller design was actually unveiled in a separate patent filing earlier this year.

The Xbox 360, for its part, also saw its share of motion control rumours swirl throughout 2008. As of today, however, Microsoft has continued to deny the existence of a motion controller for that console.

Several months ago, a variety of legitimate publications got word of a PS3 Wiimote-like device that could split in two. We dubbed it the "DualMotion."

Today the patent for the DualMotion has been uncovered and while it uses accelerometers and LED-based tracking (similar to the Wiimote), the DualMotion also deploys ultrasonic frequencies to determine absolute xyz position (based upon controller distance from other controllers and your television).

Oh, and two DualMotions can assemble to make one big DualMotion. Just check it out in what we believe is the craziest patent diagram ever:

What's so unique about the DualMotion doesn't appear to be that it splits, but that it joins. In the leaked shots of the patent app, we see two different joined configurations. One puts them side by side, like a dual-wielded pistol, and the other attaches them butt to butt, like a dog bone or Requiem for a Dream.

Here are some picture sketches of the proposed design of the wiimote.



Popular Posts