No, they haven’t. Old Xbox and PlayStation controllers often end up with stick drift being what kills them.
On top of that, newer games that have deadzone settings actually let you see how much games have to compensate for stick drift.
A normal ‘working’ controller, is likely unable to use the first 10% of it’s motion range because it has to filter that out for stick drift. That makes the controls feel way less responsive compared to a hall effect stick where you can eliminate or minimize the deadzone.
I had a lot of PS4 controllers get stick drift. A few minutes, some tools, and a lot of rubbing alcohol in the pot or whatever mechanism (the cube thatbis actually the analog stick) solved it every time. It’s dust. It’s dust and grime. It’s solveable.
I have a feeling that most people play video games way more than I do. In 34 years of gaming, I’ve never experienced stick drift (not even on the Switch). The only joysticks I’ve ever had go bad on me were on the Nintendo 64. But they would literally wear out from plastic rubbing against plastic, never drift.
No, they haven’t. Old Xbox and PlayStation controllers often end up with stick drift being what kills them.
On top of that, newer games that have deadzone settings actually let you see how much games have to compensate for stick drift.
A normal ‘working’ controller, is likely unable to use the first 10% of it’s motion range because it has to filter that out for stick drift. That makes the controls feel way less responsive compared to a hall effect stick where you can eliminate or minimize the deadzone.
I had a lot of PS4 controllers get stick drift. A few minutes, some tools, and a lot of rubbing alcohol in the pot or whatever mechanism (the cube thatbis actually the analog stick) solved it every time. It’s dust. It’s dust and grime. It’s solveable.
I have a feeling that most people play video games way more than I do. In 34 years of gaming, I’ve never experienced stick drift (not even on the Switch). The only joysticks I’ve ever had go bad on me were on the Nintendo 64. But they would literally wear out from plastic rubbing against plastic, never drift.