Steam telepítése
belépés
|
nyelv
简体中文 (egyszerűsített kínai)
繁體中文 (hagyományos kínai)
日本語 (japán)
한국어 (koreai)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bolgár)
Čeština (cseh)
Dansk (dán)
Deutsch (német)
English (angol)
Español - España (spanyolországi spanyol)
Español - Latinoamérica (latin-amerikai spanyol)
Ελληνικά (görög)
Français (francia)
Italiano (olasz)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonéz)
Nederlands (holland)
Norsk (norvég)
Polski (lengyel)
Português (portugáliai portugál)
Português - Brasil (brazíliai portugál)
Română (román)
Русский (orosz)
Suomi (finn)
Svenska (svéd)
Türkçe (török)
Tiếng Việt (vietnámi)
Українська (ukrán)
Fordítási probléma jelentése
off brand ones have issues, ms dongles always just work
https://www.emag.ro/cablu-extensie-usb-3-0-tip-a-tata-usb-3-0-tip-a-mama-1-m-puls027/pd/DRS5CZBBM/?X-Search-Id=951201840fc248d91bc3&X-Product-Id=42463654&X-Search-Page=1&X-Search-Position=2&X-Section=search&X-MB=0&X-Search-Action=view
I use both DS3 and DS4 via SCP Toolkit. The thing is, a lot of games don't support DS4 natively, and Windows itself doesn't support DS3. SCP Toolkit lets you install the drivers for both DS3 and DS4 to work exactly like X360 controller would, so basically - with every single game that's got controller support and was released in the past decade or so. It even lets you customize stuff like LED brightness, poll rate, rumble. There are two downsides tho - you always see X360 prompts in games, and some games can treat X360 and DS4 differently. So far I only had problems with MGSV - it has huge deadzones for X360.