Hardware Wii U Controller eat battery

s-arash

Well-Known Member
OP
Member
Joined
Sep 3, 2013
Messages
185
Trophies
0
Age
32
XP
364
Country
United States
hi guys

i just didnt used my wii u for some weeks , today when i wanted to turned it on via controller, it didnt , i found that my full charged controller is fully uncharged now

is this normal?
 

Cyan

GBATemp's lurking knight
Former Staff
Joined
Oct 27, 2002
Messages
23,749
Trophies
4
Age
45
Location
Engine room, learning
XP
15,648
Country
France
I don't think he is talking about the "normal" self-discharging batteries time. Gamepad are discharging as fast as if you were playing. if you don't use it for one week, it's discharged. (not using your DS, 3DS, wiimote, etc. doesn't discharge it in one week).
Isn't the gamepad always active because you can use it as a TV remote without powering the console? (sure it use less power than if you were playing, but it does discharge very fast even when not using it). They should allow a proper switch off state.
Edit: oh, and like said by Boud.. Indask8 : it's always ON to detect when you power on your console.
 

indask8

New Member Forever
Member
Joined
Apr 19, 2007
Messages
987
Trophies
0
Age
37
Location
Look at the Flag...
XP
352
Country
France
Yep the gamepad discharge itself abnormally quickly, The new bigger battery helps a little.

As Cyan says, I suspect the gamepad keeps trying to communicate with the WiiU all the time so it can turn on by itself if you turn on the WiiU first rather than the gamepad...

Would be great if Nintendo release an update with an extra option to disable the gamepad from trying to turn on all by itself, because if you don't use it for 1/2 week that's a whole battery charge cycle gone for nothing.
 

mkill

Member
Newcomer
Joined
May 24, 2007
Messages
11
Trophies
0
Website
Visit site
XP
140
Country
Qatar
yeah even if you disable the wii pad screen while gaming with a wiimote, it still discharges very fast even from brand new. I haven't played any wii pad intensive games yet, but that would be a problem on the Wireless side, you could always plug in the good ol' charger cable and your good.
 

tbgtbg

Shaking the ring ropes up in the sky
Member
Joined
Nov 27, 2006
Messages
1,999
Trophies
1
XP
1,019
Country
United States
If you know ahead of time that you aren't going to be using it for a few days/weeks/months/whatever, you could always take the battery out. That'll make sure it's completely off and not draining the battery. Of course, if not using it for a length of time is something that just happens and not planned out, you won't know to do this ahead of time.
 

Site & Scene News

Popular threads in this forum

General chit-chat
Help Users
    SylverReZ @ SylverReZ: Nope. Not into gaming.