I have one of those, they go on sale for $20 or less all the time. Works great.
That being said… i’m not here complaining about price, i’m complaining about value. Show me why this is worth what they are asking. I can and have dropped hundreds of dollars on quality peripherals many times. So far all it has is a valve logo on it. I’d buy two vaders over this any day, and that’s just one direct example.
I’m not here complaining about price, i’m complaining about value. Show me why this is worth what they are asking.
You already have a Steam Controller built into your Steam Deck. If you haven’t made custom steam input mappings to utilize the touchpads and capacitive sticks with gyro, then this is not going to appeal to you.
If you want to see what that’s all about there are videos on Steam Input for the Deck and all the cool things you can do with it. Once you have that the way you like it you wish all controllers could do it (or at least I do).
So this is a niche product for people who utilize all the control surfaces that the Deck and the original Steam Controller offer. If you don’t then it’s overpriced and not worth it.
Just a point to consider that I didn’t see you mention: a lot of times those aftermarket controllers don’t work well with linux. The auxiliary/extra buttons aren’t able to be used. This won’t really be the case for steam controller since it’s made by valve and will have all the proper driver support built in.
I have one of those, they go on sale for $20 or less all the time. Works great.
That being said… i’m not here complaining about price, i’m complaining about value. Show me why this is worth what they are asking. I can and have dropped hundreds of dollars on quality peripherals many times. So far all it has is a valve logo on it. I’d buy two vaders over this any day, and that’s just one direct example.
You already have a Steam Controller built into your Steam Deck. If you haven’t made custom steam input mappings to utilize the touchpads and capacitive sticks with gyro, then this is not going to appeal to you.
If you want to see what that’s all about there are videos on Steam Input for the Deck and all the cool things you can do with it. Once you have that the way you like it you wish all controllers could do it (or at least I do).
So this is a niche product for people who utilize all the control surfaces that the Deck and the original Steam Controller offer. If you don’t then it’s overpriced and not worth it.
Just a point to consider that I didn’t see you mention: a lot of times those aftermarket controllers don’t work well with linux. The auxiliary/extra buttons aren’t able to be used. This won’t really be the case for steam controller since it’s made by valve and will have all the proper driver support built in.
My Razer wolverine V2 is a prime example.
Try switching between Xinput and Dinput mode. You can get the extra buttons to work with one of them usually (AFAIK).