30°

Steam Controller has hidden motion features

Player One writes "Although Valve always talked about the touchpads and buttons of the Steam Controller, it seems that it has some hidden features that only some users know about. While you can set your Controller to emulate a keyboard and mouse combo, there is a little hidden option that can allow you to aim by doing motions in the air. Of course, this won’t be accurate or sensitive enough to give you precise control, but it can be a great tool for fine-tuning your aim when you can’t get that 100% accuracy on the pad."

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player-one.eu
80°

Leak claims a new Steam Controller is currently "being tooled" for mass production

Steam Controller 2 anyone? A leak suggests a return to a dedicated controller from Valve.

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overkill.wtf
Vits452d ago

That would be really nice. The Steam Controller was one of the most unique controllers out there. It wasn’t great for traditional gaming, but it worked very well for PC-focused games like RTS, 4X, or FPS.

I just hope they don’t assemble it in the US like the original. That caused serious issues with supply, warranty, and especially spare parts.

darthv72452d ago

Its pretty neat once you get used to the layout. I have mine sync with my steam deck.

70°

The Frustrating Failed Experiment That Was The Steam Controller

TheGamer Writes "I really tried with the Steam Controller. Valve's first foray into creating its own bespoke gamepad tailored specifically for PC gaming was, putting it mildly, poorly received. It launched in 2015, but by 2019 the company had quietly discontinued it. However, while everyone was gleefully dumping on it, I was determined to get my money's worth. I bounced off it immediately like everyone else, but I thought: Valve is smart."

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thegamer.com
lonewolf101195d ago

They should of added some sort of center point on the right track pad, maybe a dip in the center or a slight bump, I think that could help in games for controllers?

Espangerish1195d ago

They really just needed the second stick for me. A control scheme alone the lines of the deck would have been a big improvement

gamerz1195d ago

Still use it for controlling my living room pc. Never liked it for games. One neat thing is the scroll-wheel function by dragging your finger around the perimeter of the left circlepad - clockwise for down, counter-clockwise for up.

IanTH1195d ago (Edited 1195d ago )

It's primary value truly is in games that don't support any kind of controller input. You can do a decent job of grafting something usable for games with only direct mouse input, like strategy games and the like, thanks to the touchpads.

Outside that? The customization is really quite excellent, but it is almost impossible to use in place of a traditional controller in a lot of circumstances. It's a nice niche option to have, but I was certainly never able to have it completely replace an XB or PS controller when a game called for one.

MadLad1195d ago

I use mine all the time still.

170°

Steam Deck Is Valve's Biggest Hardware Misses in One Convenient Package

Valve's newly revealed Steam Deck is the Frankenstein resurrection of two of their most notorious products, the Steam Link and the Steam Controller.

jjb19811670d ago

The same could be said about the Switch. It is a combination of the WiiU game pad and the nunchucks. Neither of those were incredible devices either but the refined combination of the two created a highly successful device.

Immagaiden1670d ago

The nunchuck was one of the most successful accessories in gaming. It made a ton of Wii games better

Notellin1669d ago

It was so good they immediately transitioned back to traditional control schemes after the novelty wore off from grandparents playing Wii bowling twice and ordering a Wii fit.

FallenAngel19841669d ago

@ Not

Wii U utilized nunchucks
Switch had a configuration that mimics the nunchuck configuration

Inverno1670d ago

Why does it feel like the media is trying to kill this thing before it gets a chance to even be released?

ScootaKuH1670d ago (Edited 1670d ago )

Yeah I don't really get it. I know Valve have a sketchy history when it comes to hardware but to me it seems the Steam Deck gets far more right than it gets wrong.

Of course we've only seen games playing on prototype systems but already it seems really polished and well thought out. I have faith that the Steam Deck will be a success. I've reserved a 512gb model and the estimated availability is Q2 2022 (UK) so plenty of time to see how it progresses in the coming months. Right now I think it looks really promising, but if, when it launches it's not all that, then I'll cancel and I'll have lost nothing. If, on the other hand, it proves to be every bit as good as promised then I'll be happy to be in the queue 👍

Zeref1670d ago

Nintendo fans feel threatened by it because they didn't get a Switch Pro

King_Noctis1669d ago (Edited 1669d ago )

CBR is owned and operate by Nintendo fan? Wow.

Zeref1669d ago

@King_noctis

I didn't say anything about CBR, don't put words in my mouth 😕

but at the same time yeah whoever wrote could be a Nintendo fanboy

MadLad1669d ago

Because gamers seem excited and games "journalists" get off on being contrarian.

derek1669d ago

I see the exact opposite going on.

annoyedgamer1669d ago

Because its open source. And the media like closed systems that they can control through proxy.

+ Show (2) more repliesLast reply 1669d ago
garos821669d ago

is the hardware upgradeable?

Trunkz1669d ago

Yes but you’d have to really dig inside to do such a thing, I’m sure people will make step by step YouTube videos on how to upgrade parts, tho you’d void the warranty.

foker1669d ago (Edited 1669d ago )

It is cool and all,.. but the thing is huge,.. might as well get a gaming laptop at that size

Zeref1669d ago

Lol it's barely 2 inches longer, you want me to get a big ass gaming laptop cuz of 2 extra Inches? Make it make sense

specialguest1669d ago (Edited 1669d ago )

Seems you can't please everyone. I've read another comment saying the battery is not long enough. Well, a larger battery would mean the handheld would be much larger and heavier, and possibly a little pricier. Now you're saying it's too huge. Well, if it's smaller then the thing would suffer from a hardware downgrade, and cooling might be affected. Then someone else will say it's too weak. It's an endless cycle of complaints

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