At the moment I use my 8bitdo pro2. It was kinda expensive but its a huge upgrade from my no name switch controllers and awful gamesube one from powera.

Also, the 3ds had really good controls (we don’t talk about the c stick)

  • Tywèle [she|her]
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    11 months ago

    My favourite controllers are still the official Xbox controllers because of Xbox Design Labs. I like to have my controller look the way I want. And also they seem to be the only controllers that can still be powered by 2 plain rechargable AA batteries.

    Edit: Here is my design for anyone curious: Xbox Design Labs Screenshot

    • coyotino [he/him]
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      411 months ago

      Can’t believe I had to scroll this far for this. To my mind, the modern Xbox controller is the perfect controller for PC. Like you said, this the AA batteries and colorways are great, unique features. On top of this, it’s well-laid out, feels good in the hand, and every button, stick, and trigger feels great to use. And most importantly, it has the broadest compatibility. Every game recognizes the Xbox controller, and almost every game has Xbox button prompts built in.

      The only thing missing is hall-effect sticks, but I’ve never experienced stick drift on an Xbox controller so it’s not like I would notice a difference.

      • Owl
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        311 months ago

        The Xbox controllers are too big for my small hands. For people like me the dualshock 4 is more adapted + it has better build quality and feels sturdier all around

        • coyotino [he/him]
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          211 months ago

          DS4? As in the one for the PS4? It’s a bit of an unfair comparison bc they are different gens, but i would definitely argue that the current Xbox Series controllers are higher build-quality than the DS4. My Xbox One controller had creaky, rattly shoulders and an okay but not great d-pad. The newer ones fix that, fortunately.

          All that said, I will not dispute that it’s probably less ideal for smaller hands. Sony has always gotten that part right.

    • @theskyisfalling@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      11 months ago

      I don’t care about colours or AA batteries, I’d rather have a cable personally, I do agree on the choice though.

      Anything from the 360 onwards are my preferred controllers. A permanently wired 360 controller that does away with the massive battery compartment it my favourite but these days I use an “Xbox one” version with the USB C cable.

        • Yeah, as I said, I use an Xbox one controller with a USB C cable. My PC has a USB C port so I just use C to C. I just wish there was a permanently wired official version of the controller that did away with the huge battery compartment on the back :)

    • sleepybisexualOP
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      111 months ago

      Nice

      Xbox ones are cool but I can’t wrap my head around the buttons being inverted compared to Nintendo. Also how’s the dpad?

  • poVoq
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    1211 months ago

    Steam controller obviously (for everything other than retro gaming which often requires a dpad).

        • sleepybisexualOP
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          111 months ago

          That thing confuses me

          Why are the buttons below, why is there a stick if there are pads

          • poVoq
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            611 months ago

            The stick is better for movement, while the pads are better for aiming. And the buttons work fine where they are.

            Arguably the left side pad is a bit useless for gaming itself, but its nice to have two pads for desktop navigation and using the on screen keyboard that is build into steam.

            • @averyminya@beehaw.org
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              211 months ago

              Careful now, the swarm of all 11 people who use the left touchpad for movement might hear you and eat you alive while they chant, “just try setting movement to the left touchpad. You’ll never go back… You’ll never go back …”

                • @averyminya@beehaw.org
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                  11 months ago

                  I’ve tried it a number of times and just can’t get it to work for me. Far too much travel distance for me, and the lack of tactile feedback makes it difficult. In some ways, I like the floatiness feeling that that the travel distance creates, but ultimately it wasn’t worth the precision adjustments.

                  I tried it for some 2D side scrollers, FPS, and 3rd person games. I liked it most for 3rd person but couldn’t get a hang of the other two.

                  Plus, I really like using the left touch pad as a floating menu, which the joystick can’t do haha.

                  Oh, I forgot to say – the Steam Decks smaller track pad is actually nice for this reason because the shorter travel distance solves the floatiness issue for me in a lot of cases. I actually play Revita 50/50 between touchpad and joystick, just based on how I’m feeling.

  • prole
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    11 months ago

    DualSense is the best right now IMO due to the features. If you don’t believe me, actually play Astro’s Playroom.

    But I love the Steam Deck’s layout (so I guess I’d probably like the Steam Controller as well). A lot of that has to do with Steam Input being fucking awesome, but it’s also possible to get relatively good at using the touchpads as mouse, and the “touch right stick to enable gyro” is an awesome feature that has made FPS games playable on console for me.

  • @Kissaki@beehaw.org
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    511 months ago

    Steam Controller.

    It’s big enough for my long hands. And it has a ton of features and customizability.

    What I don’t like is the right track pad when games expect a joystick. Depending on the game controls, it can be suboptimal. (configurable to a degree with center deadzone)

  • Stepos Venzny
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    511 months ago

    PS2

    • best d-pad ever made
    • comfortable to my big hands without being uncomfortable to friends’ regular-sized hands
    • pressure sensitivity all over the place, even if that did get underutilized
    • versatile design that’s equally comfortable to use for 2D and 3D games and doesn’t specifically favor a small number of genres
    • smooth, strong, and yet quiet rumble
    • good heft
    • uses a cord so no fucking around with batteries
    • sensibly named and located Start and Select buttons (Everyone‘s been dropping the ball on that front, lately. Sony most of all.)
  • @morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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    411 months ago

    I really liked the wavebird for the gamecube, unfortunately mine went into the aether on my last move, got bluetooth adapters to pair modern controllers with it but the wavebird was really cool at the time, was really amazing to not have to be tethered to the console and it being first party, though at the time the madcatz stuff was decent.

    For recent controllers, I’ve been using a knockoff 360 controller for moonlight recently and after a lot of back and forth I really think MS nailed the controller setup back then (OG Xbox being decent but not a preference, I hated the duke, s controller was solid though), I like the xbone controllers as well, but IMO they’re just iterations on the 360 controller, easily my preference as an all rounder controller layout.

    I have a steam controller, used it for a while but it’s been some time now, had some really great ideas, I’d totally go for an updated steamdeck style layout on that, probably a second for me.

    I’ve had so much drift issues with ds4s that I personally don’t reach for a ds4 or dualsense for non playstation games, I like being able to swap batteries and the Xbox/Steam controllers all seem to have way better battery life in general, I keep a stock of rechargeables around so not generating piles of waste.

      • @morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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        111 months ago

        Totally was, it didn’t have rumble for battery life reasons, but didn’t miss it much at the time, barely used the rumble pack on the n64, think I got mine at EB games to try out the OOT secret hint feature (it’d buzz the pack if you were near a hidden secret), feedback has come a LONG way since then in terms of immersion.

  • Feydaikin
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    411 months ago

    Given that the only console games I play are old Nintendo platformers, I’m gonna have to go with the NES Controller.

    Trying to play Megaman 2 with analog sticks is an exercise in anger management. XD

    • sleepybisexualOP
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      411 months ago

      Also, I think you might like the 8bitdo sn30

      Its a SNES shaped one with small analogs.

      Dpads are cool

  • @jarfil@beehaw.org
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    411 months ago

    Keyboard and mouse… but the Steam Controller is cool too.

    Other than that, any PS clone. The long thin horns fit my hands better than others.

  • @mxl@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    8bitdo ultimate. Already lasted more than a couple of months, as opposed to the last two Xbox controllers I had. I just wanted hall effect joysticks and Xbox layout.

    • sleepybisexualOP
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      211 months ago

      Nice

      Yea, 8 bitdo have good controllers.

      How much was the ultimate? My pro2 was about 50 euro

    • Berttheduck
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      411 months ago

      Have you tried the ps5 controller? Genuinely my favourite thing about the ps5. The adaptive triggers and the haptics are so good. The battery life feels better too. That was my biggest complaint about the 4s especially compared to the ps3s, those lasted for weeks.

      • prole
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        311 months ago

        Yeah if they like the PS4 controller, then they’ll 100% love the DualSense.

        Just play Astro’s Playroom and you’ll get it.

        • @Sordid@beehaw.org
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          211 months ago

          I have both PS4 and PS5 controllers for use with my PC, and I prefer the PS4 one because it feels more comfortable in my hands.

  • QuentinCallaghan
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    311 months ago
    • 8bitdo SN30 Pro
    • GameCube controller
    • Nintendo Switch Pro Controller
    • Super Famicom controller (mainly the face button colors and layout)
      • QuentinCallaghan
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        311 months ago

        Ergonomics, NFC support and gyro. Of course the rumble could be stronger but I have gotten used to it.

        • sleepybisexualOP
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          211 months ago

          My aliexoress ones have super strong rumble. NFC is cool. But don’t most switch stuff have gyro?

          • QuentinCallaghan
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            111 months ago

            Most Switch games support gyro functionality, and of course the Joy-Cons also have gyro.

          • @JillyB@beehaw.org
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            111 months ago

            I think most PowerA controllers don’t have gyro or NFC. PowerA is what you’re most likely to find as a 3rd party controller.

  • @Thavron@lemmy.ca
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    211 months ago

    PC game for decades with a recent (5 years?) Switch purchase. I was never a fan of controllers and still aren’t for anything to do with aiming, but the Switch Pro Controller impressed me as a real nice piece of hardware. Battery life is phenomenal too.

  • Hazelnoot [she/her]
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    211 months ago

    Another vote for the steam controller - it’s versatile enough to work comfortably with every game I’ve wanted to play.