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Steam has improved support for the PS5 DualSense controllerIt’s not perfect, though, so your results may vary

It’s not perfect, though, so your results may vary

The PlayStation 5 landed in the UK last week (and in the US the week before), bringing with it the shiny new DualSense controller.Steam was quick to implement initial support for it, too. Now, over the weekend, Valve have improved that support, meaning your Steam games will be able to use the DualSense’s fancy LED, trackpad, rumble and gyro features.

Full support for all this is available on the public beta Steam desktop client, and they plan on rolling it out to Steam proper after some more testing.Death Stranding,No Man’s Sky,Horizon: Zero Dawnare mentioned as a few examples of games that fully support the controller, but any games that use the Steam Input API are fully compatible with it, “with no developer updates required,“they say. “It just works.”

Watch on YouTube

Watch on YouTube

Cover image for YouTube video

There’s no word on whether or not Steam will be able to make use of the DualSense’s excellent haptics. The controller’s triggers have adaptive feedback when playing certain PS5 games, and it’s actually brilliant. The most obvious examples are being able to feel the tension as you pull back a bowstring, or feel resistance when trying to crush something. I don’t know how they could make it work for PC, but I sure hope they do. It’s something that I initially thought was a bit of a gimmick, but it’s genuinely very cool.

Valve have also released some statistics on how many people actually use controllers on PC. Over the last two years, they say the number of players using a controller on Steam daily has doubled, with PlayStation controllers making up 21.6% of all “controller sessions”.

The way they talk about it makes it seem like lots of people didn’t know others liked to plug a controller into their PCs. Is this a thing? I’ve always enjoyed using my PS4 controller for more relaxed games likeStardew Valleyor Sea Of Thieves. Sure, I wouldn’t use it for a shooter like Rainbow Six Siege that requires precise aiming, but it’s quite nice to have the option to not constantly lean over a keyboard.

Both thePS5andXbox Series Xhave launched now, and they’re pretty decent pieces of tech - controllers included. Our hardware queenKatharine had a go at building her very own Xbox Series X PClast week, and it was darn pricey to make.