Steamをインストール
ログイン
|
言語
简体中文(簡体字中国語)
繁體中文(繁体字中国語)
한국어 (韓国語)
ไทย (タイ語)
български (ブルガリア語)
Čeština(チェコ語)
Dansk (デンマーク語)
Deutsch (ドイツ語)
English (英語)
Español - España (スペイン語 - スペイン)
Español - Latinoamérica (スペイン語 - ラテンアメリカ)
Ελληνικά (ギリシャ語)
Français (フランス語)
Italiano (イタリア語)
Bahasa Indonesia(インドネシア語)
Magyar(ハンガリー語)
Nederlands (オランダ語)
Norsk (ノルウェー語)
Polski (ポーランド語)
Português(ポルトガル語-ポルトガル)
Português - Brasil (ポルトガル語 - ブラジル)
Română(ルーマニア語)
Русский (ロシア語)
Suomi (フィンランド語)
Svenska (スウェーデン語)
Türkçe (トルコ語)
Tiếng Việt (ベトナム語)
Українська (ウクライナ語)
翻訳の問題を報告
On the PC I've used Xbox controllers for years and they've always worked fine and held up well. But I would qualify my use as a light as I tend to prefer using a kb/mouse when it's an option. So I can go weeks or months without using a controller sometimes. Hard to wear things out when usage is part time, and I tend to be pretty kind to my electronics which certainly doesn't harm them.
But if you're using a controller ten times as much as I do, I expect yours to wear out before mine for obvious reasons.
the controller needs a new pot module, not very easy to replace for a beginner
but for those experienced at desoldering through hole devices it can be done
this video will explain it a lot better, and maybe its possible to fix the xbox controller just the same
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8tya5UZvpyE&ab_channel=YourSixStudios
If you can return/replace them I would do that first, but since these are cheap controllers it'll most likely happen again.
Not with an official MS controller. My left Rift-S controller stick has had drift problems, but I fixed it with the magic spray. Buy a can, it's useful for many things (buttons, mechanical keyboards, controller sticks...)
Never thought about using my DeoxIT FaderLube to fix the problem. Going to try this on my 2 360 controllers that have had drift for some time. Usually just set the dead zone in the controller configs to avoid the drift.