At the last SEA-CCC meetup, AmigaLove member mattsoft brought an unusual and curious looking joystick along with his gear. It was the tiny little Power Stick Precision Joystick, created a million years ago (1983/84) back before Amiga made computers and their logo looked like a neon sign found at a roller rink.
Small peripherals like this one were an attempt to support the company financially while they tried to build their original Amiga computer prototype, aka Lorraine.
After I saw Matt’s Power Stick - the first time I’d seen one in person - I was intrigued. It wasn’t the best joystick I’d ever used but it was interesting and a unique experience, if a bit squeaky sounding.
It supported both lefties and righties and the tiny joystick seemed to encourage more precise movements with less effort. It did this because - at least for an adult’s hand - it required the use of one hand to hold it and “fire” and two fingertips or a thumb to maneuver, rather than an entire hand like most old-school joysticks. Heck, some folks could hold the entire thing and use it with a single hand. As such, it didn’t seem to generate very much muscle fatigue. It was lightyears better than an original Atari joystick, which is really what it was trying to replace.
A few days after the meet-up curiosity got the best of me and I started to hunt around. After a short search, I found a gentleman who had a pile of various joysticks - each in near-mint condition and at very cheap prices.
And lo-and-behold, one of the tiny pieces of his pile was a pristine Power Stick.
The Power Stick uses the old Atari plug, so it can actually be used with a ton of consoles and computers from the 1980s and early 90s. Part of what Amiga called the "Power System" it even has a separate number pad for use with ColecoVision and Intellivision consoles, which is kind of crazy - although those extra attachments appear to be extremely rare. They also made a tan/black colored version rather than black/red, which I’ve also never personally seen.
After about a week I got it in the mail. It really is mint. And it is weird. But god dang it, it has that groovy early-80s logo and it is pretty cool to use. So I’m proud to put it in my collection. It’s not going to replace my TAC-2, but it’s pretty cool nonetheless.