r1 r1 and l1 l2 like right one right two and left one and left two you get it?
The D-pad buttons is basically the directionall buttons on the ps2 controller... basically the up,down,left,right buttons.
analog sticks
The d-pad is the set of directional buttons on the left side of the controller.
Shoulder Buttons are the buttons located on the back (from standard handling viewpoint) of the controller. On the PlayStation 2 controller, there are 4 shoulder buttons - designated L1, L2, R1 and R2. Random History: The modern "shoulder" button concept first came from Nintendo, in the Super Nintendo Entertainment System controller, released roughly between 1990-1993. The SNES controller and it's shoulder buttons influenced every controller released by any company for all future systems.
There are 2 L buttons on the Xbox 360 controller. The LB buttons is located at the top left of the controller and the LT button is located at the back of the controller. Just to sum it up, these are not buttons, these are triggers.
That means to push left on the directional pad, which is on the left side of the controller with four buttons in the cardinal directions.
Yes you can use a PS2 controller into a PC by buying a PS2 to USB connector. This is a connector that tricks the controller into thinking its a PS2.
It must actually be a PS2 controller for it to work
No,a PS2 controller will not work on your PC.
On the left-hand side above the left analog stick. The "up", "down", "right", and "left" looking buttons.
It's the buttons on the left side of the controller, opposite of the square triangle circle X button. The D Pad is merely the down arrow
No, on the 360 controler there is no White and Black buttons, they are replaced by two bumper buttons just above the triggers, much like the PS2 controler.