A simple gamepad controller test, that allows you to check buttons and joysticks in a flash! Simply press the corresponding button/joystick on your gamepad and it will light up to show it's recognized. This tool is used to test the functionality of the buttons and axes of a joystick or gamepad. Just click on the buttons below to see how it works. It doesn't need any installation or configuration, just open it and start testing your device.
Based on our record, Keysticks should be more popular than Gamepad Test. It has been mentiond 5 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Huh maybe use gamepadtest.com to see if the controller is not at fault. Source: about 2 years ago
And yes, you can remove the joystick usage from the HID report descriptor. I've updated this gist above showing this (https://gist.github.com/todbot/a3fc00da979fe96dc509bed6cb73cf99) It works and can be seen by test apps like https://gamepadtest.com/ but it's 16-buttons, not 12 like yours. Source: almost 3 years ago
His thread above is archived, but I worked off this to find out more - so credit to the GOAT. My issue was that the left thumbstick would seem to "give out" when put into a certain direction (mine happened to be the X-axis, mainly to the right). Looking at a gamepad testing site, it would bounce between the point I had it set to, and "0" rapidly. The brokenness seems "random" between users and what directions are... Source: about 3 years ago
FULL disclosure I haven't personally tried this but in theory should work: Click start - type MSTSC - select show options - local resources - show more - put check mark in ports and other usb device - click connect Type in PC name and press enter (If it denies you google how to fix it) Once connected to remote PC open "Setup USB controllers" and see if it's identified as a controller or not IF it DOES -... Source: over 2 years ago
I've done that with a cheap Chinese DualShock-like USB gamepad using Keysticks. Source: over 2 years ago
In my case I used Keysticks quite a while ago, but still works for that, it just allows you to re-map your keybinds into a controller (I think its only for Xbox, dunno if works with PS controllers). Source: almost 3 years ago
Out-of-the-box is not possible to set the controller as presenter with PowerPoint. You need a software called KeySticks . It looks like old, but it works. - Source: dev.to / about 3 years ago
So to y'all wanna play java edition with a controller? Well I mean, that would be the only reason you're reading this post soo... anyway. I recommend downloading KeySticks, it allows you to change every button on your controller to an input on the computer, and it's extremely easy to use! If you don't already have a controller, then I recommend using the 8BitDo Pro 2 controller with KeySticks. It 's cheaper, works... Source: over 3 years ago
Joystick Mapper - Joystick Mapper, An app for Mac OS X that allows you to use gamepads in any app or game
JoyToKey - JoyToKey enables users to control the keyboard using any USB compatible controller (Dualshock 3, Xbox 360, etc.)
SDL2 Gamepad Tool - It's a simple GUI tool to create/modify gamepad mappings for games that use SDL2 Game Controller API. Created to be an alternative to Steam Bigpicture gamepad configurator.
DS4Windows - DS4Windows is an open-source gamepad input mapper and virtual emulator designed to use and connect your PlayStation controller (DualShock 3/4 and DualSense 5) to a Windows 10 & 11 PC.
Controllers - Controllers turns your Mac into a console gaming experience.
AntiMicro - A tool for mapping keyboard and mouse events to gamepads and joysticks.