Probably for good reason, since I obviously get over-worked when playing video games. But anyone who has completed every single thing in Soul Caliber 2 (including all extra missions in Weapon Master Mode) knows, fighting games can get pretty frustrating when the AI is giving you the beat down of your life and you have no way to defend yourself let alone fight back.
So that's where controllers get broken
I didn't think I was very rough with my poor wavebird. I did slam the controller, but it was on my couch, and the thing was still in my hands. That's nothing compared to the havoc wreaked on my favorite SNES controller (during Street Fighter 2 Turbo), which underwent the fate of being flung by the chord against my basement wall, which in turn caused it to be reduced to 100 little pieces.
My Wavebird, however, has not been reduced to a pile of assorted plastic. The power light even lights when the switch is flicked. There just seems to be no signal getting to the receiver (and yes, I made sure the two were set t the same channel). This made me attempt to open it to see if there was something fixable (not sure what I expected to do). However, Nintendo seems to want to keep you out of their controllers. The screws holding it together are not phillips head, not flat head, but some sort of three-pronged screw. The folks at the hardware store had no idea what tool could open it.
So that leaves me with two options:
1) someone here knows how to open this thing up
2) someone might know if I can send it to get repaired.
Frankly, the $35 controller is probably just on the edge of repair costs. It's expensive enough to want to repair, but I may spend just as much on it as buying a new controller.
If nothing else, let this be a lesson to all easily frustrated gamers out there: have a non-breakable item you can throw with you at all times