Speaking with IGN, disabled players explored how Xbox's changes to third-party accessory allownace will impact their setups, the overall cost of their equipment, as well as money lost, and the ways in which the community is reacting.
Probably be happier gaming on the PC than Xbox, especially if one wants flexibility to modify things on the system side to work better.
Speaking of which, I’m wondering what kind of impact this will have on the PC controller market. The XBox-style controller kind of became the norm on the PC. But if this does a lot to kill the third-party XBox controller market – because no XBox players are buying them any more – then you can’t make a controller that sells to both the PC and XBox market. I assume that people on the PC might start using Switch-style or Playstation-style controllers.
I’m also kind of surprised that Microsoft didn’t just set a “no online play” flag. As I understand it, the concern is people using nonstandard controllers to get an edge. But as long as there aren’t any leaderboards or online play I wouldn’t think that third-party controllers would cause a problem. That’s not gonna make everyone who’s disabled happy, but at least it leaves single-player games alone. Maybe the problem is that some games are already out in the wild – so won’t support such a flag – and record offline results and upload them when the network comes back or do some sort of other behavior that Microsoft can’t readily work around with OS changes.
EDIT: For PC-based game players, this may also be a good time to pick up a secondhand XBox-style third party controller if one wants them, if it’s going to create a large mass of people with controllers that can’t be used on the XBox that they want to use them on.
goes looking for a list
Yeah. This claims to be a complete list of authorized controllers.
Places like Thrustmaster make some pricey controllers – the P310 doesn’t appear to be on the authorized list, and that’s $750. Now, maybe Thrustmaster is eventually gonna go back and go through whatever certification program Microsoft has, or maybe they aren’t, but the controller isn’t on the list now, and I imagine that some people are just gonna get rid of the things if they start throwing errors.
I switched over to a dual sense controller recently and it’s great aside from just being kinda small feeling when using the sticks, would love a controller with the Xbox layout with gyro so I can actually play an fps game and not feel like I’m playing with 1 hand, also the dual sense triggers and bumper shape suck for sliding between them and the triggers are too short for use in racing games
Probably be happier gaming on the PC than Xbox, especially if one wants flexibility to modify things on the system side to work better.
Speaking of which, I’m wondering what kind of impact this will have on the PC controller market. The XBox-style controller kind of became the norm on the PC. But if this does a lot to kill the third-party XBox controller market – because no XBox players are buying them any more – then you can’t make a controller that sells to both the PC and XBox market. I assume that people on the PC might start using Switch-style or Playstation-style controllers.
I’m also kind of surprised that Microsoft didn’t just set a “no online play” flag. As I understand it, the concern is people using nonstandard controllers to get an edge. But as long as there aren’t any leaderboards or online play I wouldn’t think that third-party controllers would cause a problem. That’s not gonna make everyone who’s disabled happy, but at least it leaves single-player games alone. Maybe the problem is that some games are already out in the wild – so won’t support such a flag – and record offline results and upload them when the network comes back or do some sort of other behavior that Microsoft can’t readily work around with OS changes.
EDIT: For PC-based game players, this may also be a good time to pick up a secondhand XBox-style third party controller if one wants them, if it’s going to create a large mass of people with controllers that can’t be used on the XBox that they want to use them on.
goes looking for a list
Yeah. This claims to be a complete list of authorized controllers.
https://www.sportskeeda.com/gaming-tech/a-list-licensed-authorized-third-party-xbox-controllers-accessories
Places like Thrustmaster make some pricey controllers – the P310 doesn’t appear to be on the authorized list, and that’s $750. Now, maybe Thrustmaster is eventually gonna go back and go through whatever certification program Microsoft has, or maybe they aren’t, but the controller isn’t on the list now, and I imagine that some people are just gonna get rid of the things if they start throwing errors.
I switched over to a dual sense controller recently and it’s great aside from just being kinda small feeling when using the sticks, would love a controller with the Xbox layout with gyro so I can actually play an fps game and not feel like I’m playing with 1 hand, also the dual sense triggers and bumper shape suck for sliding between them and the triggers are too short for use in racing games