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If your machine has a turbo button - make sure you use it!
Pressing a Turbo button while moving will cause the virtuaroid to dash for a few seconds.
Turbo buttons were for people with slow thumbs.
In addition, the action buttons have turbo button functionality (approximately 20 presses per second).
This may sound a bit obvious, but some machines come with a turbo button which can slow the PC right down.
Also, should the player reach the normal maximum speed of 280 km/h, a turbo button is enabled.
A turbo button located on the control panel switches from restricted to unrestricted speed mode.
On this controller, the turbo buttons are labeled "dial-a-speed" buttons.
Holly's thumbs hovered over the turbo buttons.
Adding a turbo button for quick bursts of speed could save the player from those moments when it becomes impossible to reach an enemy in time.
The top buttons are Turbo buttons.
On personal computers, the turbo button is a button which changes the effective speed of the system, making equipment run faster (or slower) in some way.
Other than the touchpad, the controllers had a standard set of features for controllers of the time, with turbo button support.
While the implementation of the turbo button by manufacturers has all but disappeared, software developers have compensated with software replacements.
Players can trigger the turbo button and use the right analog stick for ball-handling moves to fake out their defenders and create scoring opportunities.
One example is DOSBox, which offers full turbo button functionality with adjustable clock speed.
A unique feature of the controller was the built in Turbo buttons, which had 3 settings for the I & II buttons.
On release, the spin would land on or near the cabinet panels, turning the ordinary button into a turbo button thus giving him a major advantage.
The Pegasus joypads, in addition to the buttons found on the original Famicom controller, also had two Turbo buttons.
The NES Max was far superior, though - instead of toggle switches for the turbo, it had turbo buttons.
I like the Max for it's shape and the turbo buttons, but I never actually used the thumb-disc and instead just mashed the entire directional surface area.
The possible weapon input combinations has been greatly increased, with the ability of using the turbo button in combination with the weapon triggers to form "turbo attacks".
The turbo buttons on the A and B buttons helped me get ridiculous scores on California Games and Track and Field 2 back in the day as well.
It introduced many elements of that would become standard in the series, including the isometric on-court perspective, the "T-meter" for shooting free throws and the turbo button used to give players a temporary burst of speed.
The turbo button usually accomplishes this by either adjusting the CPU clock speed directly, or by turning off the processor's cache, forcing it to rely on the significantly slower main memory for memory accesses.