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Nahlásit problém s překladem
Out-of-the-box, Windows will consider them an audio headset, and Windows is designed to switch your active recording and playback device to a headset you plugged-in.
What you need to do is go into the Sound Settings in Windows,
Advanced > All sound devices > Input devices
Select the "wireless controller" and select "Don't Allow"
Now Windows will no longer auto-switch your microphone to the one built-in to the DualSense. The mute button on the controller itself is useless on Windows :) The actual PlayStation console processes that, Windows doesn't know anything about it.
I only can hear through one ear on my headset lol so I made my sound mono to be aware ingame on Fortnite.
Its vibrating when you have your sound set to mono. Just change mono to off in your settings
Edit: I also use Wireless Controller as my default output
DualSense controllers are basically 4-channel audio devices.
The first 2 channels play on the internal speakers / attached headset.
The remaining 2 channels are used for haptics.
Setting audio to mono is going to send the same audio to all 4 channels (including the 2 surround channels that aren't actually speakers).