Over the years since the SNES gaming system became defunct, enterprising gamers have come up with a few different uses for the old SNES controllers. Some examples of their ingenuity have been to turn it into a bluetooth device and converting it to a PC controller via the USB. Full instructions on how to do the latter can be found on the instructables and the lifehacker websites.
Pawn Shops, classic game stores, yard sales, and online shopping sites. Ex. Ebay
To get past the start screen of Mario Paint, you need to press the "Start" button on your Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) controller. This will allow you to enter the main menu where you can choose various activities like painting, music composition, or playing mini-games. The game requires an SNES controller, and if you're using an emulator, any compatible controller or keyboard mapping will work as well.
Games are cheaper on the SNES and the SNES has better graphics.
Secret of Evermore - 1995 VG was released on: Canada: October 1995 (SNES version) USA: October 1995 (SNES version) Australia: 1996 (SNES version) New Zealand: 1996 (SNES version) France: February 1996 (SNES version) Germany: February 1996 (SNES version) Netherlands: February 1996 (SNES version) Spain: February 1996 (SNES version) UK: February 1996 (SNES version)
SNES Mouse was created in 1992.
use a emulater
The Wii classic control is based of the original SNES controller. It has 2 analog joysticks, a four-way directional navigation button and four action buttons A,B,X and Y, as well has the start, home and select buttons.
No, only SNES ROMs work on SNES. You need a NES emulator to run NES ROMs.
All cables are compatible.
The SNES is a great system and so is the N64 i had a SNES before i loved it but now i have a N64 and i like it too personally its on you.
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.