My wonderful x-55 Rhino started to become unresponsive on certain important buttons these past weeks, just past the warranty of course, and I figured it was time to upgrade. And it really is just one option.
I have just unpacked, set up and assigned buttons to my shiny new Warthog HOTAS, and wow! ..what a bucket of mixed feelings!
Stripped down version of my personal experience:
Warthog vs Rhino Pro's: very solid, metal, very precise. This feels like the real deal, and I love it! The Rhino always was a bit too plasticky, but its quality performance makes you forgive any possible shortcomings! (until it breaks, that is)
Cons: Warthog has way less buttons, ans switches, and no wheels. And no twist stick, so no logical (my logic) yaw on the stick; I had to assign yaw to one of the hat switches.
All in all I know I am going to be very happy with the Warthog HOTAS once I learn the new control setup I had to design due to the lack of buttons compared to my Rhino, and for now I am just enjoying just handling it, the real metal feel of.. well, you get the idea; I don't want this to get too weird.
The Warthog cost me twice as much ($399) as I spent on the Rhino ($199), but I added a 3 year extended warranty; lesson learned!
If you love this game and ask me if you should spend $400 on a Warthog, I would say: if you have (or can get) the money? most definitely! If it is a tight squeeze, go for the Rhino, but get an extended warranty, because there are a lot of buttons than can get damaged.
I have just unpacked, set up and assigned buttons to my shiny new Warthog HOTAS, and wow! ..what a bucket of mixed feelings!
Stripped down version of my personal experience:
Warthog vs Rhino Pro's: very solid, metal, very precise. This feels like the real deal, and I love it! The Rhino always was a bit too plasticky, but its quality performance makes you forgive any possible shortcomings! (until it breaks, that is)
Cons: Warthog has way less buttons, ans switches, and no wheels. And no twist stick, so no logical (my logic) yaw on the stick; I had to assign yaw to one of the hat switches.
All in all I know I am going to be very happy with the Warthog HOTAS once I learn the new control setup I had to design due to the lack of buttons compared to my Rhino, and for now I am just enjoying just handling it, the real metal feel of.. well, you get the idea; I don't want this to get too weird.
The Warthog cost me twice as much ($399) as I spent on the Rhino ($199), but I added a 3 year extended warranty; lesson learned!
If you love this game and ask me if you should spend $400 on a Warthog, I would say: if you have (or can get) the money? most definitely! If it is a tight squeeze, go for the Rhino, but get an extended warranty, because there are a lot of buttons than can get damaged.
Last edited: