Which over the years had the track record of the making the most ergonomic/easy to use/effective controller?

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Topcyclist

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Poll Which over the years had the track record of the making the most ergonomic/easy to use/effective controller? (16 votes)

Nintendo 13%
Xbox 44%
Playstation 38%
Sega 6%
Other 0%

Considering stuff like how ugly i thought the GameCube controller was button placement wise

(that giant and small button did me no favors)

to the way the switch feels great on paper for two players to share, and I love that, but boy do I think the controller is tough to get into after playing other systems

(likely my issue is I need to play more Nintendo). Kudos for Nintendo always trying something new though.

Next, the xbox had those giant controllers (why i liked dreamcast) back in the day, which I liked and I know people with big hands who thanked Xbox for that. The layout they made stuck with many, and it's pretty solid but again maybe I just don't play enough switch.

Then you have PlayStation. I think due to it using shapes over letters it helps me not press the wrong buttons like I do when switching to Nintendo so It got a leg up. But overall the controllers they make haven't changed much for good reason, they are solid and have a good layout and feel. Besides the obvious, I'm including stuff like the feel of say a Nintendo Gameboy which felt great in my opinion, or a PSP which seemed solid but not as good. Or anything else you want to include.

PS: I'm guessing others would include stuff like phones or tablets etc.

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AtheistPreacher

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I prefer Sony's controllers, but that's the least surprising thing in the world considering Playstation has pretty much been my primary gaming console since the PS1 one came out. It's hard to be objective about it when those controllers are just the ones I'm used to.

It does say something that the DualSense resembles an Xbox controller more than any of Sony's controllers ever have before. In that sense I suppose MS ultimately won the battle for most ergonomic shape, they all basically look like that now. However, I will say that I've always hated both the feel of the Xbox d-pad and the placement of it further away from the outer edge. I will die on that hill, so to speak. I much prefer the mirrored analog sticks of the Playstation controllers.

Nintendo easily wins for most creative controllers over the years, they've never been afraid to try new things, but I can't say I've ever really been in love with any of them.

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FinalDasa

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PlayStation makes the comfiest controllers.

Xbox makes a controller that I think about the least while using it.

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Topcyclist

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PlayStation makes the comfiest controllers.

Xbox makes a controller that I think about the least while using it.

I feel like that got my point well. Xbox feels like the new default, where you don't think about it. I like that PS used shapes in theory...since it's not language based, anyone can understand it sorta. It makes sense business wise. But the x,y, b,a format helps me, aka b = back in a lot of games, so it confuses me when i get told press b to go start...when playing a nintendo game. But that's besides my question, kinda. The other issue is i just wasn't a fan of gamecube's look for the controller, and think wii controller was great until you play a more serious game, then wii u was unwieldy, and switch is fine for casual play but couldnt see it working for say a heated dark souls fight. PS is good but kinda boring now that they wont change lol, but ehh fair enough. I liked the box nintendo one even if it hurts hands. dreamcast was fun too, very ergonomic and the memory card idea was a nice touch at the time to keep the system small and let you see stuff. Overall, they're all pretty solid.

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@finaldasa: Wow do I disagree with this.

I do not find ANY PlayStation controllers comfortable with the possible exception of the DS4, which was...okay. But I have a friend who literally could not use it and had to buy a dongle to use a Switch Pro controller on his PS4 because the DS4 was unusable for him.

I made a thread about how bad the Dualsense was for me when I first got it, and a lot of people agreed. I did adjust to it and with better hand positioning it's fine, but I've never seen people have the same complaints about the Xbox controller, and a lot of people use that as the PC default.

I think Xbox has the best controller shape. The Switch Pro controller copied it even more blatantly than the DualSense did. The problem with Xbox controllers is they haven't bothered putting in the new bells and whistles that others have. No motion controllers for gyro aiming and the like is just inexcusable at this point, and Switch and Dualsense have better rumble. Adaptive triggers are a cool idea though they don't actually do that much in my experience.

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chaser324

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#5 chaser324  Moderator

There's a reason that the Xbox design has become the defacto standard. I don't really hate the PlayStation controllers as much as some people, but it's just nowhere near as comfortable to use for an extended period of time.

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Ben_H

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#6  Edited By Ben_H

The DS4 is almost the perfect controller so I went Playstation even though I haven't used the DualSense (I also liked the DS1 and DS2. They were fine. I never used a DS3 or Sixaxis). The DS4 is light, comfortable, and quiet. It loses points by not having a replaceable battery along with weak battery life but if you mostly use it with PC like I do, the trick is to go into the custom lighting menu in Steam or on DS4Windows and disable the controller's glowy light altogether. I swear it triples the battery life to have that big bright LED turned off. I only have to charge my main DS4 like once a week because of this.

Prior to this generation of controllers I would have said Xbox. The 360 and Xbox One controllers are both extremely comfortable and I still use both regularly. The Xbox One controller is in my view one of the best controllers ever made.

The problem is that the new revision of the Xbox controller that came with the Series consoles is a massive step backwards. It's not only much cheaper feeling, but worse in many other ways than the Xbox One version. Firstly, it's way too noisy. The face buttons are extremely clicky and loud to the point of being distracting. Then there's the D-pad. I could deal with the face buttons being how they are but the D-pad makes this thing unusable. It's somehow even louder than the face buttons (Gerstmann complained about this too. He said it's so loud that he can't use Xbox controllers anymore because the clicks wake up his kids if they're napping in his office). Not only is the new D-pad extremely noisy, but it's also far too stiff. There's no play to the D-pad so you have to use a bit of extra force to do inputs, which over time adds up. I tried playing Tony Hawk 1 + 2 with it and ended up with a sore thumb within about 20 minutes. It's like they looked at the 360 D-pad and went "How can we make this worse in every way possible" and did it. It was clearly designed by people who think of games as shooters where the D-pad is only occasionally used, not people who play fighting games, indies, retro games, or RPGs that rely upon using the D-pad extensively.

My actual hot take answer is that if the Switch Pro controller had analog triggers it would be my favourite. It's extremely light, quiet, and has a battery that lasts weeks. The D-pad isn't as good as the DS4 but it's still good enough for most games. I use my spare Pro Controller with my Steam Deck a lot and it's great.

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sombre

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The PS5 controller has a battery life of about 3 hours, and that's horrific

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judaspete

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#8  Edited By judaspete

Honestly, I have encountered very few modern controllers that I didn't like. Like if you go way back, the Atari joysticks aren't great, and playing NES games on something with round edges sure beats the OG rectangle, but it's been a long time since I felt a 1st party gamepad was getting in my way. N64 had an impractically large pad, but having essentially two different setups made it work well for a lot of different types of games. GC button layout was only an issue for 2D fighters, but the system had very few of those anyway. Dualshock 1-3 were a bit small, but very practical with their layouts. DS4 improved this a lot. DC probably should have had a second stick but had great ergonomics. XBox controllers click too loudly, but are great otherwise.

Have to agree with @ben_h:. A Switch Pro controller with analogue triggers would be perfect, and fortunately it basically exists in the 8Bitdo Ultimate Bluetooth.

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@sombre said:

The PS5 controller has a battery life of about 3 hours, and that's horrific

This may be very "old man yells at cloud," but I could not care less about controller battery life because I never unplug the thing. Cords simply don't bother me, and I'm not sure why every controller needs to be wireless now. If there was an official wired DualSense I would buy it.