this post was submitted on 01 Oct 2025
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Linux Gaming

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I currently use keyboard and mouse or a Dualshock 4 controller for most games, but i'm tired of so many games being really terrible with my controller. For example, Cemu swaps the two triggers with the two axes of the right stick. So i'm considering just buying a new controller that will hopefully be easier to make work.

I was thinking about getting an Xbox controller, but i've never been an Xbox guy so i have no idea what controller is good for gaming on Linux. I assume most of them are good for Windows, but i don't use that. While looking up some differences between 360 and One, Reddit reminded me that other controllers than PlayStation/Xbox/Nintendo exist, like the ones from 8BitDo.

What i'm looking for in a controller is:

  • I usually prefer using the Dpad to the sticks, but something that won't easily develop drift problems is still important to me.
  • I like being able to use my controller over a wire instead of just wireless, so bluetooth or a dongle is nice but a wired connection is essential.
  • Generic cords are more convenient than ones that are proprietary or just weird (it took me so long to figure out my Wii U pro controller uses mini-USB), though i understand that what's still common changes with the times and i can't expect an old controller to use USB-C. Something that's easy to replace if it breaks is really what i want for the cord.
  • And i also have a Wii U, so something that can connect to that as a Wii U pro controller, Wii classic, or GameCube (natively or via Bloopair/Koopair) is nice but not essential.
  • I have Steam, AntiMicroX, and Input Remapper and i can use them to fix inputs for some games, but not all games.

So what controllers do you all use? What's good and will actually work for most games that have controller support at all?

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[–] Redkey@programming.dev 3 points 5 days ago (1 children)

There was a recent discussion about controllers that may help you, here: https://lemmy.world/post/35100527

To add to my recommendation in that thread of the Logitech F310, for your question specifically:

  • The wires on both it and the F510 are built-in, not socketed. In my experience usually only wireless controllers have socketed cables.
  • I've never had the buttons on it get swapped around on any OS.
  • I've never had any of them develop drift, and they're all 8-12 years old at this point.
  • They don't support the WiiU.
[–] toddestan@lemmy.world 2 points 4 days ago

I have the Logitech F310 and I can also say it's a good controller. Works flawlessly on Linux, and has never given me any trouble. Buttons always worked, no drift issues. Can't really ask for more.

I realize it's a fairly basic controller, but every time I've taken a look at maybe upgrading I've ended up concluding that just sticking with using the F310 is the best option.