PS2 accessories, the dedicated parts catalog for the PlayStation 2 at ZedLabz.
Browse PS2 accessories
Everything that surrounds a PS2, memory cards, AV cables, component cables, AC power leads, multitap adapters and controller extensions. The PS2 has a long tail of owners and is still in active rotation across collectors and casual players. We stock the consumables and replaceables that wear out first: memory cards (8MB, 16MB, 32MB, 64MB), AC cables for both Phat and Slim power supplies and AV connections from composite up to component.
Quick picks by use case
- Save game storage: 8MB memory cards are the original spec; aftermarket high-capacity cards (16MB / 32MB / 64MB) compress saves to fit more.
- TV connection: composite AV cables for older TVs, component cables for sharper picture on CRT and component-input HDTVs.
- Multiplayer: a multitap turns the PS2's two controller ports into eight, for old-school party titles.
International tracked shipping available. Returns and replacements per our returns policy.
Related collections
PS2 accessories. FAQs
Are aftermarket PS2 memory cards reliable?
Quality varies. Reputable aftermarket cards typically work well for everyday save data, though the very-cheapest cards can corrupt over time. Larger-capacity cards (16MB+) compress saves, which works for most games but occasionally trips up titles that expect exact 8MB sectoring.
Can I get PS2 video over HDMI?
Not natively, the PS2 outputs analog (composite, S-Video, component, RGB SCART). HDMI requires either an external converter (composite-to-HDMI scaler) or an internal HDMI mod board. Our retro HDMI mods collection covers the internal options.
Does the PS2 Slim use a different power cable?
Yes. The original PS2 Phat uses a standard kettle-style mains lead direct to the console. The PS2 Slim uses an external AC power brick with a barrel-jack output to the console. The two are not interchangeable.
Will PS1 controllers work on a PS2?
Yes, the PS2 controller ports accept both PS1 and PS2 pads. Most PS2 games are designed around the DualShock 2's pressure-sensitive face buttons, so a PS1 pad works but loses some functionality in pressure-aware titles.
























