Not me, sorry. On desktop Linux, I’m always wired, and the bluetooth always just worked when I needed it on Bazzite or Steam Deck, but maybe someone else here will know.
Comment on Gamepad for Linux Gaming?
Zarxrax@lemmy.world 15 hours agoI tried out Linux a few months back, and one of the things I could never get working was my Bluetooth Xbox controller. The controller would just blink and never connect to the Bluetooth. Any idea what needs to be done to get it working? I was kind of annoyed that it didn’t just work since it’s such a popular controller.
ampersandrew@lemmy.world 15 hours ago
1adam12@lemmy.ml 14 hours ago
ArsonButCute@lemmy.dbzer0.com 13 hours ago
Xone is the one I’ve needed instead of xpadneo to get the xbox wired headset working with them.
1adam12@lemmy.ml 3 hours ago
Xone I use with the official xbox wireless controller adapter but xpadneo for Bluetooth Xbox connections.
KoboldCoterie@pawb.social 14 hours ago
cecilkorik@lemmy.ca 12 hours ago
As a veteran of gaming on Linux for several years, I have to admit I keep a small collection of various usb bluetooth dongles, because honestly, built-in bluetooth support still remains questionable and unreliable in many cases, at least for me and the systems I use it on. I don’t necessarily blame Linux as much as I blame the manufacturers of the chips and devices, but unfortunately we have to live with the chaos that their reverse-engineered-firmware-reliant devices create. Any cheapass bluetooth dongle is probably fine, the cheaper and more ubiquitous it is, the more likely it uses the same shitty chinese chip that all the others use and that a bunch of someones already hammered out drivers for, but honestly even with multiple different models and brands it still seems like a crapshoot which one feels like working properly at any given time, but usually one or the other will work and get things to connect, and it’s usually perfectly reliable once all the drivers have loaded and it’s all paired up and things start working. The struggle is real, though.