PS1 accessories, the modder-focused upgrade and repair hub for the original 1994 PlayStation at ZedLabz.
Browse PS1 accessories by type
- All PS1 parts, full PS1 hub
- PS1 spare parts and mods, internal repair parts
- All PS1 listings, broader PS1 catalog
- PS2 accessories, sibling generation
The original PlayStation launched in 1994 and built a catalog that's now firmly in retro-collector territory. Original cables, memory cards and multitaps wear or get lost over the decades; we stock the practical replacements that keep a working PS1 fully kitted out. AV cables, third-party memory cards, controller extension cables and the small accessories collectors hunt for.
Quick picks by use case
- Easy entry point: a fresh AV cable. Original cables are now decades old and connectors corrode. A clean replacement often resolves picture and sound issues a console owner has lived with for years.
- The crowd favorite: AV cable plus a third-party memory card. Original Sony memory cards are increasingly hard to source clean; modern equivalents preserve save data reliably.
- The pro choice: AV upgrade (component or RGB SCART rather than composite), multitap for four-player party games, plus a controller extension cable for sofa-distance play.
Tracked worldwide delivery on every order.
Related collections
PS1 accessories. FAQs
Are PS1 and PS2 accessories cross-compatible?
Many. PS1 controllers and memory cards work in a PS2, and the AV multi-out cable connector is shared. PS1 controllers fit PS2 ports; PS2 controllers don't always feel right for PS1 games (DualShock 2's pressure-sensitive buttons aren't used by PS1 software). Multitaps differ. PS1 and PS2 multitaps are not interchangeable.
Which video output suits a PS1?
For period-correct CRT play, RGB SCART tends to give the cleanest signal. For modern displays: component or composite into an upscaler. The PS1 doesn't natively output HDMI. HDMI mods exist in the wider modding community but composite or RGB cables are the simpler upgrade for most owners.
Can I still get working PS1 memory cards?
Yes, third-party PS1 memory cards remain available and are typically the simpler choice now. Some modern cards offer larger capacity than the original 15-block Sony cards. Original Sony cards are increasingly collector items; for save reliability the third-party option is often the practical pick.
Is it worth keeping a PS1 alive today?
For owners with attachment to specific titles, yes. The PS1 catalog has games that haven't been re-released in modern collections, and original hardware running on a CRT is still the period-correct way to play many of them. A working PS1 with fresh cables and a modern memory card is a small commitment for a long-term retro setup.















