(04-29-2010, 07:42 AM)Capico Wrote: [ -> ]so can you use the nintendo- supplied sensor bar that came with the wii, or must it be 3rd party pc version? I already have a wii and controller, so all I'd need to buy would be bluetooth usb and the sensor bar.
Cut off the USB wire which not use and connect with the wii sensor bar .Then connect it to PC(Google to find the tutorial).Or you can buy the wireless sensor bar (drain off battery fast)
(04-30-2010, 04:11 PM)admin89 Wrote: [ -> ] (04-29-2010, 07:42 AM)Capico Wrote: [ -> ]so can you use the nintendo- supplied sensor bar that came with the wii, or must it be 3rd party pc version? I already have a wii and controller, so all I'd need to buy would be bluetooth usb and the sensor bar.
Cut off the USB wire which not use and connect with the wii sensor bar .Then connect it to PC(Google to find the tutorial).Or you can buy the wireless sensor bar (drain off battery fast)
I tried to find a tutorial but they were all down. could you reccomend a cheap way to adapt it to usb or just a usb sensor bar to purchase? candles are out of the question.
Wiimote+nunchuck+motionplus: About $80 or so
Wireless sensor bar: $5
Rechargeable battery pack x2: $10-15 or so.
Wont need anything else for most things on the wii.. (I have 4 of that set [except sensor bar] because my friends/family members play a lot)
P.S. You can also buy 3rd party accessories for cheaper but I've never been a big fan of that... Seeing as their quality tends to often go for the worse after just 6 months of usage.
My original wiimotes work just as new even after 3 years.
P.p.s it's a really bad idea not to buy rechargeable batteries unless you play really little
(05-02-2010, 11:24 PM)Ocean Wrote: [ -> ]P.p.s it's a really bad idea not to buy rechargeable batteries unless you play really little
Lol I've used 1 non-chargeable battery for 6 month(play dolphin everyday with sensor bar).My idea was to use the USB energy so the battery AAA won't drain off