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Game Controllers comparison

Compare game controllers — Hall-effect sticks, haptic feedback, back paddles, battery, and platform support.

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What to know about game controllers

How to choose a game controller in 2026

Pad design plateaued for a decade and then accelerated again: Hall-effect and TMR sticks killed stick drift, adaptive triggers added a new haptic dimension, and modular paddles became mainstream. The Mars Score weights sensor type, haptics, latency, battery, and platform support.

Hall-effect / TMR vs potentiometer sticks

Traditional potentiometer sticks wear and drift within 12–24 months of heavy use. Hall-effect (magnetic) and TMR sticks have no mechanical wear surface and effectively eliminate drift. GameSir, GuliKit, and 8BitDo ship Hall-effect controllers under $80; first-party Sony and Microsoft pads still ship potentiometer sticks even at the Edge / Elite Series 2 price tiers. This is the single most important decision a heavy user makes.

Adaptive triggers and rich haptics

The Sony DualSense's adaptive triggers and dual-actuator haptics are still the best implementation in mass-market hardware. Xbox and third-party controllers ship rumble motors at best. Adaptive trigger support is title-dependent — check the game catalog before paying the premium.

Back paddles and remappable layouts

Pro controllers (DualSense Edge, Xbox Elite Series 2, Scuf, Razer Wolverine) ship 2–4 back paddles plus on-board remapping profiles. Pull-to-fire claw grip becomes optional rather than necessary, which matters over long sessions.

Latency: wired vs 2.4 GHz vs Bluetooth

Wired and 2.4 GHz dongle latencies sit at ~4–8 ms; Bluetooth ranges from 15 to 40 ms depending on stack. Competitive players notice the difference; casual players do not. Our Mars Labs measures input latency for every reviewed pad.

Platform compatibility

PS5 controllers work on PC over USB or Bluetooth via Steam Input. Xbox pads are first-class on PC. Switch Pro controllers work on PC with caveats. Third-party "universal" pads usually do not match first-party platform integration for force feedback.

How vsMars scores game controllers

Each score combines stick type, haptics, latency, battery, weight, and remapping per the methodology. See game consoles for matched first-party pads and gaming headsets to round out a setup.