The first-person shooter was born to be played on a PC, with a mouse and keyboard. Then along came consoles, and things had to change. The SplitFish FragFX Shark is trying to change things back.
Specs
Price: US$89.99
Platform: PS3 / PC / Mac
Whatâs in the box: Mouse, Nunchuk, USB Adapter, Mouse Pad
Designed for the PS3 (but also compatible with the PC and Mac), the Shark is a great idea for a tiny, dedicated niche of PlayStation 3 owners who do nothing but play first-person shooters all day. For everyone else, itâs more trouble than itâs worth.
The Basics
For a few years now, SplitFish has been trying to bring the accuracy of a mouse to PlayStation 3 gaming with its FragFX controller setups, and the Shark is the latest in this line. It consists of two controllers: a mouse and a ânunchukâ, similar to that youâd find for the Wii or PlayStation Move (itâs even got its own gyroscope for motion control, just like the DUalShock 3). Thereâs also a small USB dongle that you insert in the PS3 (or PC/Mac, if youâre short a mouse) so that the devices can communicate.
Using It
The Shark is a cinch to use on your PS3. You plug in the USB dongle, turn on both controllers and youâre off. The ânunchukâ is essentially the left half of a regular DualShock, with an analog stick (which handles player movement) and trigger buttons, while the movement of the mouse takes up the role of the right thumbstick (which is how you look around and aim). The mouse buttons replace a DualShockâs triggers, while the PlayStationâs face buttons (X, O, etc) are tucked away on the inside, near the userâs right thumb.
The only hassle comes in playing different games; the Sharkâs sensitivity can differ from title to title, so you have to adjust each gameâs settings accordingly.
What We Liked
In many ways, it works as advertised. When playing Killzone 2, aiming felt smoother and more precise than with a regular controller, as did the important task of snapping between regular aiming and a âdown the sightsâ view (accomplished with a click of the mouseâs scroll wheel). It was also a joy using the mouse to control the cursor in the PS3âs web browser, making it far easier to use than with a standard controller.
What We Didnât Like
Itâs just soâŠconvoluted. To use the shark effectively, you have to re-learn everything you instinctually know about first-person shooters. The concept of what a trigger does, what a click of the right thumbstick accomplishes, etc is so hard-wired in our gaming consciousness that it takes a lot of hard work to use a different scheme. And I donât think the slight improvements in aiming speed are worth that hassle. Both controllers also feel cheap, especially the uncomfortable mouse, which is disappointing for a setup that costs USD$90.
The Bottom Line
If you do nothing with your PlayStation 3 but play first-person shooters, and are willing to put in the time and effort needed to master a new control scheme, then the Shark will be worth a look. But seeing as itâs over-priced, tough to master and is of limited use in other genres, for most people thereâs not much to recommend.
The FragFX Shark was developed by SplitFish for use with the PlayStation 3, PC and Mac. Retails for USD$89.99 and released in Fall 2010. A device was given to us by the manufacturer for reviewing purposes. Tested on PlayStation 3 using Killzone 2, Uncharted 2, XMB and web browser.