Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Google gaming console controller design, features reportedly revealed in patent

Add as a preferred source on Google

A newly discovered patent may have shown the design and features of the controller for Google’s rumored gaming console, which will reportedly be revealed this month.

The patent is not for the controller itself, but rather for a notification system. It will enable the controller to let the player know if a game becomes available, if the player has received an invitation, if there are changes on a leaderboard, and if a chat request was received.

Recommended Videos

The document, filed with the United States Patent and Trademark Office, comes with images that reveal the design of the controller, which resembles the PlayStation 4 DualShock controller.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

There are two joysticks, a directional pad, four gameplay buttons, and pairs of shoulder and trigger buttons. There also appear to be home and back buttons at the top part of the controller, a circular button that Google referred to in the patent as an action button, and microphone button in between the joysticks that may hint at compatibility with Google Assistant.

The patent was filed in October last year, and is a continuation of a previous filing that was lodged in 2014. This means that there may have been changes to the controller’s design, if the patent is indeed for the rumored Google gaming console.

That did not stop people from creating unofficial renders based on the patent’s technical sketches though, with Sarang Sheth, editor of Yanko Design, coming up with these:

The rumored Google gaming console is known as Project Yeti, which aims to run high-performance titles on Google’s machines and then stream them to devices owned by players. Part of Project Yeti is Project Stream, which ended a three-month demo in January that successfully streamed Assassin’s Creed Odyssey on Chrome browsers.

The hardware for Project Yeti reportedly started as a Chromecast dongle, but it has since evolved into a console and controller that were designed by Google, which is rumored to be revealed at the Game Developers Conference on March 19.

It remains unclear if the controller in the discovered patent will be what Google will unveil at GDC 2019, if the rumors are true. The event is just a week away though, so official confirmation may arrive soon.

Aaron Mamiit
Aaron received an NES and a copy of Super Mario Bros. for Christmas when he was four years old, and he has been fascinated…
The MSI Claw 8 EX AI+ shows up as the future of gaming handhelds, but its price is just painful
New retail listings reveal the steep price of Intel's next-generation gaming handheld.
MSI Claw 8 EX AI+ Price Featured

When Valve introduced the Steam Deck, it proved that PC gaming could be portable without costing a fortune. A few years later, however, gaming handhelds seem to be entering a completely different league. According to a Newegg listing spotted by VideoCardz, the upcoming MSI Claw 8 EX AI+ will retail for $1,699, making it one of the most expensive handheld gaming PCs yet.

The MSI Claw 8 EX AI+ packs flagship specs and an equally flagship price

Read more
EA just launched a new business that wants to sneak ads naturally in your games
The publisher says future in-game advertising should feel natural instead of disruptive.
EA Advertising Main Cover

Electronic Arts has officially unveiled EA Advertising, a new business unit dedicated to bringing brands directly into its games and live experiences. Instead of relying on traditional banner ads or pop-ups, the company says it wants advertising to feel like a natural part of the world players are already immersed in.

EA wants brands to become part of gameplay instead of interrupting it

Read more
A Nintendo Super Mario Bros. copy just sold for a staggering $3 million
This rare Super Mario Bros. copy is now the most expensive video game ever sold
Super Mario Bros Sealed Copy

A sealed copy of Super Mario Bros. for the NES just sold for $3 million, which is a historic moment for video game collecting. The sale happened on June 12 during Heritage Auctions’ Video Games Signature Auction. According to Heritage, the copy is the highest-graded example of the earliest sealed edition of Super Mario Bros. and beat the previous video game record by $1 million. That earlier record was a $2 million private sale in 2021, also for a copy of Super Mario Bros.

Why this isn't just any other Mario cartridge

Read more