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Wingman Warrior

From Joystick Directory
Revision as of 12:43, 31 March 2022 by Jdadmin (talk | contribs) (Created page with "The Wingman Warrior premiered with a testimonial from John Romero: "When I created Doom I never imagined there'd be such a killer way to play it. Wingman Warrior is it."<ref>https://twitter.com/romero/status/1406971938057117697</ref> And yet, shortly thereafter, the Wingman Warrior was abandoned, its drivers never updated to NT-based operating systems like Windows 2000 or XP. (It still works using the gameport as a 3-axis flight stick, but the spinner isn't functional...")
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The Wingman Warrior premiered with a testimonial from John Romero: "When I created Doom I never imagined there'd be such a killer way to play it. Wingman Warrior is it."[1]

And yet, shortly thereafter, the Wingman Warrior was abandoned, its drivers never updated to NT-based operating systems like Windows 2000 or XP. (It still works using the gameport as a 3-axis flight stick, but the spinner isn't functional this way.) The Warrior did one thing well, but unfortunately, that one thing was only broadly useful for a short period of time.

Manufacturer's Description

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Description

The Wingman Warrior combines two controllers: a 3-axis flight stick with throttle, 4 buttons, and a POV hat, plus a spinner controller. The intended usage was for games like Doom that had no 3d targeting, just 2d - with the spinner you could precisely aim horizontally. However, with Quake and other full-3d shooters hitting the market, suddenly the ability to aim both horizontally and vertically became important, and mouselook/WASD claimed the day.

Second-hand Wingman Warriors are sought out by emulation users, as the Wingman Warrior is (if you can get it working) one of the easiest ways to get a spinner controller to play games like Tempest, Arkanoid, and Tron. Drivers are available for Windows 95, 98, and ME, and also for Linux. In DOS, a switch on the rear of the device sets whether the hat switch or throttle dial is active; it cannot support both at once in DOS.

Technical specs

  • 4-button analog flight stick plus POV hat, with trim dials.
  • Throttle dial.
  • Spinner controller.
  • Dual connectivity: DE-9 RS232C serial for full functionality, or DA-15 joystick port for all controls except the spinner.

Gallery

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Reviews

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Sources

Credits

The description of this controller was provided by Brad Jones (@kazrak on Twitter)