Gravis Firebird 2 joystick

Title

Gravis Firebird 2 joystick

Subject

hardware: computer peripheral, game controller

Description

Historical context
(by Z. Stachniak)

In the final two decades of the twentieth century, the personal computer industry experienced rapid technological advances that included, among other innovations, the development of high-performance input devices (such as game controllers) as well as sound and video cards. Array Technology Inc. (ATI, founded in 1985), Creative Technology (1981), Logitech International (1981), Matrox Graphics (1976), and NVIDIA (1993) are examples of leading manufacturers of such products.

In Canada, several companies—besides ATI and Matrox—successfully designed and manufactured input devices and add-on cards for personal computers. One such company was Gravis Computer Peripherals Inc. (Gravis), founded in 1982 in Burnaby, British Columbia. In 1985, the company was renamed International Gravis Computer Technology Inc., and following its amalgamation with Abaton Resources Ltd. in 1987, it adopted the name Advanced Gravis Computer Technology Ltd. In 1997, Gravis was acquired by Kensington Computer Products Group, which incorporated the Gravis brand of entertainment gamepads and joysticks into its product line.

The "Company Background" published on Gravis' ftp site in 1997, described the company's origins this way

Gravis originated in 1979 from the passion for computer games shared by two childhood friends, Grant Russell and Dennis Scott-Jackson. They soon found that joysticks and paddles on the market did not provide a real arcade feel or precision, and they typically broke down within weeks of intensive game use. This started them on the quest to build a better joystick.

Between 1985 and 1997, Gravis designed and manufactured several award-winning joysticks and gamepads for desktop computers produced by companies such as Amiga, Apple, Atari, Commodore, IBM, and Tandy. Its first product, the Gravis Analog Joystick, introduced in 1985, quickly became a popular choice among computer gamers. The Gravis PC GamePad, released in 1991, was equally successful and was adopted by numerous electronic entertainment companies, including Nintendo and Sega. Similar success followed with the Firebird programmable game controller, introduced in 1996.

By 1996, the number of retail outlets carrying Gravis products exceeded 11,000 worldwide, making the company one of the world’s largest suppliers of computer joysticks and gamepads, according to reports such as those published by PC Data.


Gravis Firebird 2

The Gravis Firebird programmable game controller was introducewd in 1995. The Firebird 2 followed in 1997. It offered 13 programmable buttons and 8-way hat switch giving a player direct access to the majority of functions required by games of the late 1990s. The Firebird 2 software allowed an assignment of a single or a series of commands to a single button bypassing keyboard commands.

Museum holdings
  • Firebird 2 programmable joystick, rev. 2, 0398,
  • Firebird 2 Quick Install manual, Gravis, 1997,
  • The Gravis Game CD , Gravis, 1997 (includes a full manual).

Creator

Advanced Gravis Computer Technology Ltd.

Source

donated by Szabolcs Albertini

Coverage

world, 1996--

Files

Citation

Advanced Gravis Computer Technology Ltd., “Gravis Firebird 2 joystick,” York University Computer Museum Canada, accessed January 8, 2026, https://museum.eecs.yorku.ca/items/show/329.

Output Formats