I think the best feature of the Dualsense is by far it's gyro feature which is great to simulate mouse accuracy with a controller. Steam input natively supports the Dualsense also so there's no need for DS4 windows if you're primarily a steam gamer.
Steam input is great but it breaks and defaults to thinking its controlling a mouse and keyboard whenever I boot up an emulator That being said gyro is awesome - I use it on fortnite every now and then and the game controls so much better
@@crustbound yeah I saw a video maybe a few days ago.. The first wave of DualSense controllers have an FCC ID that ends in the number 1, whereas the FCC ID on the redesigned controllers ends in the letter A. SONY made the 2nd gen controllers more durable and less prone to stick drifting...
@@maddsmadyan most games dont support any of the dualsense features like haptic feedback and adaptive triggers. Even if the same game supports it on ps5. Ive used it for some and used the DSX app to make it work but it just isnt really supported. I waited til black friday and got it for $50 instead of $70, so you may wanna wait for memorial day sales. If you dont care ab that and just want the controller to work and vibrate then go ahead, but youll notice its not designed for pc or supported really. Still a nice controller and you can use software like dsx to make it work decent enough, but itll never function as well as on ps5 mainly w the adaptive trigger and haptic feedback.
Wierd flex: We got a PS5 back when it came out, but I’ve literally never used it. I just forgot about it as I don’t have any games for it. But other people use it so I guess it’s not a waste
@@crustbound I started playing on my laptop, and I never saw any games that I should buy for the PlayStation. It’s been used most by my mom who plays Planet Coaster 🤣. Tbh I would sell it if it was mine to afford Crystalized sets