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Difference between revisions of "Competition Pro 5000"

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{{Review|review=This has a very stout base in which two fire-buttons are set - there's no button on the stick itself. The large knob and short stick mean that this is one to hold in the palm and direct with short, sharp movements.|author=Peter Connor|pub=[[Personal Computer Games]]|issue=April 1984|score=}}
{{Review|review=This has a very stout base in which two fire-buttons are set - there's no button on the stick itself. The large knob and short stick mean that this is one to hold in the palm and direct with short, sharp movements.|author=Peter Connor|pub=[[Personal Computer Games]]|issue=April 1984|score=}}


{{Review|review=The Pro 5000 has been the forefather of what all joysticks should be, sturdy, well-built, fully microswitched, highly responsive and extremely reliable. |author=Ian Machin / Tony Takoushi|pub=[[C+VG Magazine]]|issue=February 1988|score=}}
{{Review|review=The Pro 5000 has been the forefather of what all joysticks should be, sturdy, well-built, fully microswitched, highly responsive and extremely reliable. |author=Ian Machin|pub=[[C+VG Magazine]]|issue=February 1988|score=}}


{{Review|review=|author=|pub=|issue=|score=}}
{{Review|review=|author=|pub=|issue=|score=}}

Revision as of 09:27, 15 March 2022

Reviews

"This has a very stout base in which two fire-buttons are set - there's no button on the stick itself. The large knob and short stick mean that this is one to hold in the palm and direct with short, sharp movements."
"The Pro 5000 has been the forefather of what all joysticks should be, sturdy, well-built, fully microswitched, highly responsive and extremely reliable."
""

Sources

  1. C+VG Magazine (EMAP), February 1988