You've been calling the X button on the PlayStation controller the wrong name for decades (SNE)

Sony

  • Sony's PlayStation game consoles have used an evolving version of the same gamepad since the mid-'90s, when the PlayStation 1 first launched.
  • The controller, known as the "DualShock," features a characteristic set of symbols on its buttons:△, O, X, and ▢.
  • Traditionally, people have referred to those symbols as "triangle, circle, X (as in 'ecks'), and square."
  • As it turns out, the X is actually the "cross" button.
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If you've used any PlayStation game console across the last 20-plus years, you're familiar with the PlayStation gamepad: The DualShock.

Its parallel thumbsticks, shoulder buttons, and symbol-clad buttons have become iconic in mainstream culture.

Perhaps most of all, the X button — the button used most often for affirming selections, among many other actions — is extremely recognizable. 

Here's something you almost certainly didn't know: It's not actually called the "X" button.

When Sony's official PlayStation Twitter account asked its 17 million followers what they call the button, an overwhelming majority confirmed it was known to them as the "X" button (pronounced: "ecks" button).

But there's a sharp difference between what the world has adopted as the button's official name and what Sony calls it.

Tweet Embed:
//twitter.com/mims/statuses/1169651442027827200?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
Triangle
Circle
Cross
Square

If Cross is called X (it's not), then what are you calling Circle?🤔 https://t.co/dvQ19duemW

Indeed — the "X" button is actually the cross button, according to Sony's official word.

That has long been the case, but clearly it isn't a well-known fact given the stark difference in responses to Sony's own polling.

The "X" has long been a point of contention in product names. Both Apple's OS X operating system and iPhone X are often referred to by people as "oh ess ecks" and "iPhone ecks" — but Apple thinks of those X symbols like the Latin numeral for ten, thus "OS Ten" and "iPhone Ten." 

That isn't stopping anyone from calling them OS X and iPhone X, of course, and that situation clearly applies in Sony's case as well.

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