did people's PS3 controller battery die a lot?
My 2 launch sixaxis still has fine battery...Maybe I didn't play enough.
My SIXAXIS controllers also have decent battery. It's a Shinn post. I wouldn't take it seriously. It's basically a game of damage limitation for one side, and exaggeration for the other.
It's interesting people are still of the mind set that lithium ions are likely to just die or die out so soon. These things degrade at a very slow rate, in-fact, NiMH rechargeable batteries (like the AA one's used for devices), degrade on average at 4 times the speed.
There's other funny elements to his post.
- always need to plug the controller for recharge
I plug mine in like once a week. On the PS4 you can recharge controllers whilst the console is off, so it's a non issue, and certainly not "always". PS4 being USB3 as well means it'll probably recharge quicker too, even though the PS3 already charged controllers very quick.
- short cable
A longer USB cable can be bought for £2 off Amazon...
Some of the reasoning is reminiscent of one of the arguments promoting the use of external power supplies. What if it dies, if it's internal the whole thing will need to be replaced. Well, the same argument could be used for promoting having other components external too, like hard drives, blu-ray drives, memory and all sorts. It's regressive and backwards excuse making, used to justify archaic design. The idea is to design these things to be long lasting, AND have good refined design. I have devices with batteries (SIXAXIS, mobiles etc) or power supplies built in (TV's, consoles etc) that are several years old, some over a decade, that still work.
Ironically, hard drives die or give out far more commonly than power supplies in consoles, these can be replaced in the PS4, but not on the Xbox One. More commonly than that are GPU issues, but you're going to have to send away to repair either way for that.