


- Use steam controller wired in full#
- Use steam controller wired in Pc#
- Use steam controller wired in tv#
It could've been fixed decades ago, but nobody seems to have cared.
Use steam controller wired in full#
Our input APIs are full of poor assumptions, lackluster abstractions and arbitrary boundaries. When it comes to a controller, or anything, that I myself just use inside my own apartment and no one else sees ever, I'm not talking about it feeling cheap as a way of not letting me demonstrate my wealth and purchasing power to the world. I in no way think Valve made a mistake making this controller, as I stated I use it a lot, I just think I personally would be more inclined to stick through the growing pains if I had paid more money and was more invested and knew that when I put in the time to configure it perfectly for a game it'd be a "premium" experience all around. I would normally be totally okay with a controller "feeling cheap", and think of it as a positive (especially since it means the price isn't inflated for no good reason), it's just with the mixture of constant-growing-pains that makes me snap out of disbelief and say "why am I using this controller?" to myself a lot. It feels like a toy when I hold it in my massive hands. I think it feels cheap because it feels like rubber and it doesn't have any weight. But everybody complains of it being "cheap" - perhaps they should have made it from machined aluminium or gorilla glass or something absurd like that. A handheld device being light is a GOOD thing. Valve made the "mistake" of constructing a controller that is light and strong, from plastic. This is how it is with the steam controller. I think "premium" just means "expensive", as in, "look at my conspicuous display of wealth, I can afford to spend money on materials for my phone which are entirely unsuitable when considered in any objective way". Glass or Machines Aluminium are supposedly "premium" despite that they easily scratch and break/bend/shatter, are heavy, make it difficult to implement core features like antennas, etc etc. What does "it feels cheap" actually mean? Some people keep saying this, but I suspect they are expressing their own personal pejorative opinions of materials, and not actually whether those materials are fit for purpose and doing the job intended. I think if I paid a bit more for it and it felt more premium, I'd be more invested in taking the time to configure it just right. I may be part of a small niche market but I would gladly pay $150-$250 for a good feeling controller that does exactly what the Steam Controller does. I love the Steam controller, but it just feels so cheap so that when any growing-pains pains get in my way, it's one more negative against it compared to just using my other controllers. When they first talked about open sourcing all the designs for it I was hoping someone would take the specs and make a all-metal version of the controller, with some more heft.
Use steam controller wired in Pc#
In some games it's _so_ close to perfect but the game disables mouse-input if you are using a controller, which means you can't use the Steam Controller to its full capability.Īll in all, I mostly use my Xbox controllers (connected to my PC via the Microsoft adapter) to play on my Steam Link, mainly because the Steam Controller just feels cheap. It's hit or miss in many games, the best experience I've had with it is in Civilization. I would say in the last year I've spent at least 80-100 hours using my Steam Controller in different situations and games.
Use steam controller wired in tv#
I use the Steam Link + Steam Controller to play games from my PC in my home office on my TV in my living room, a lot.

I'm still working my way through this article (after watching the video at the beginning) but one random comment about the Steam Controller I want to drop in:
