The Evercade line of consoles and handhelds have been gaining a number of 3D games as of late, including ones initially released on the PS1 and N64. However, there hasn’t been a way to actually play them using a controller designed for 3D navigation, i.e., ones with analog sticks. That’s about to change as the Evercade VS’latest updateadds support for analog controllers.

I’ll be honest with you, I don’t own an Evercade VS, so my relief is strictly vicarious. I can’t imagine playingGloverorLegacy of Kaneusing strictly digital controls. It can be done, the company assures, which I’m sure most handheld owners already know. I believe it, I just wouldn’t prefer it. They admit that it was a “hotly requested feature.”

Evercade Vs.

I’ll copy+paste the list of games that support analog from Evercade’s site:

They note that this feature is still in beta, so they’ll try and improve it over time. In the meantime,Time Extension notesthat it supports Xbox, PlayStation, and 8BitDo pads. The company does note that they’re not planning on producing any official Evercade analog controllers, so it’s strictly BYOB right now.

Marvel Rivals season 0 battle pass art with Doctor Strange, Mantis, and The Punisher

On top of this rather important feature, they are adding a cartridge eject feature, in case you’re not brave enough to hotswap. There’s also a turbo-fire function that is being added in beta. On one hand, I’m not sure why that wasn’t already a feature, but also, I guess I don’t just normally expect a turbo-fire. So, it’s nice to have, especially if you play any of the platform’s numerousscrolling shoot-’em-upsand are willing to sacrifice your pride to save your thumbs.

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Far Cry’s art

Battlefield 6 aiming RPG at a helicopter

Milla Jovovich portraying Alice in Resident Evil 2002, wearing a red dress and holding a gun in her hand.

Characters combatting strange creatures in Light of Motiram.

A battle scene in Battlefield 6 Open Beta

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CoD BO7 The Guild robot