Rumor: Is This The Controller For Valve’s CONSOLE? Mayhaps!

Hey. Hey you. Internet person. You want to check out what may be the controller for Valve’s wunder-console? Which isn’t even itself confirmed yet?

Hit the jump.

Kotaku:

A report published on The Verge last week mentioned not just the company’s machine but a patent for a control pad as as well. This patent, first filed in 2009 and published in 2011, is for a “Video Game Controller” featuring “user swappable control components”. In other words, a control pad where you can mess around with the style and placement of some of its inputs. It’s certainly interesting enough to take a closer look at.
While the full report mentions things like biometric feedback, similar to the technology found in Nintendo’s missing-in-action Vitality Sensor, the patent itself sticks mostly to the concept of swappable components, illustrating examples like switching the placement of thumbsticks, and replacing them with extra peripherals like trackballs.

In the gallery above you’ll see all the images included with the patent, which show some of the possibilities for input placement.

Conveniently, it seems the controller is “smart”, in that it can detect the type of modular component being installed and configure itself accordingly.

It was submitted by three Valve employees – Mike Ambinder, Steven Bond and Scott Dalton – and Valve Corporation is listed as the assignee of the application, so we know it’s an official, in-house project.

What we don’t know, and this is important to remember, is whether this thing still survives in this form. If this Valve “console” is indeed real (and if it is, here’s a pic of what could be a prototype), the capabilities of its controller may well have changed in the months since this was first submitted.

It’s also important to note that this is a patent application, meaning the appearance of the controller is only for illustrative purposes (perhaps based on a prototype unit, using an Xbox 360 pad as a base), and is not necessarily indicative of any actual designs Valve is working on.