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So here it goes. I never had my own controller before, but the couch is really compelling. I'd like to try it out, but I don't have much money and I have a few questions. I already have some money saved for steam controller, but I'd like to get a few traditional controllers with my friends to play some local multiplayer games.
Unfortunately one controller shouldn't be over ~25€, otherwise it wouldn't be affordable for us. Of course, it also should work with Linux and Steam well.
But the most important reason why I am writing this is because I am not sure if local multiplayer works with different gamepads? Maybe that is common sense, but I'd like this "traditional" gamepad to work with steam controller together. I also want to be sure that multiple gamepads can be connected at the same time, but it should "just work" if it's wired, right?
I feel like I am more confused about all this gamepad business than I should be. But I guess it's better to be safe than sorry.
P.s. I am thinking about Logitech F310. Maybe I (and my friends) should just get that one?
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As far as the X360 controller goes, I would go with the official wired one by Microsoft; I've seen it on sale a few times over at Amazon for a little less than $30 USD. Otherwise, a lot of third-party variants (think of PDP, for example) aren't natively supported in the kernel, which means you'll have to manually set up a custom controller mapping in order for it to work.
But I would just go with the F310 for minimum hassle.
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So I reckon if X360 is out of the question, my best bet is indeed the F310, right?
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I might add that the official controllers work much better than third party controllers, I have a generic ps3 controller that works ok, but my official Sony controllers work perfect.
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They often end up having to switch between xpad and xboxdrv between certain games. The reason being is that xpad detects the 360+logitech triggers as axes. But this seems to confuse the bajesus out of some games, and they decide that the triggers are an analogue stick. This problem can be worked around by using xboxdrv, and setting the triggers as buttons flag. But its still annoying for them. Also xboxdrv likes to crash when you unplug the controller, but that might be a Fedora issue. I hear xboxdrv hasnt been maintained in a while.
Im not sure if the trigger problem is in xpad, or stereotypically poor controller support in some pc games. Maybe its a bit of both.
It seems correct to me that the triggers would be axes, perhaps there is a way i can recalibrate them to report dead center when off, instead of the top left corner the axes marker currently sits at.
Either way the steam controller works great with everything ive tried it on. Sometimes you end up spending 15 minutes tweaking the mapping, but once its done its done.
I see no reason why multiple controllers wouldnt work at the same time. Ive seen xpad assign players 2, 3, and 4 to the 360 light on the controller. I imagine it would more be a question of wether the game itself supports multiple controllers.