How to Use a PS5 DualSense Controller on PC — Complete Setup
Use a PS5 DualSense controller on Windows. Wired, wireless, Steam mapping, DS4Windows for non-Steam games, adaptive triggers and haptics, firmware updates.
The DualSense is the best gamepad on the market in 2026 — adaptive triggers that resist when you draw a bow, haptics that distinguish between rain and gunfire, a touchpad that some PC games actually use. The catch: it’s a Sony controller and Microsoft is not in a hurry to make it feel native on Windows.
Five paths exist for getting a DualSense onto a PC. The right one depends on whether you use Steam, whether you want adaptive triggers in non-Steam games, and how much fiddling you'll tolerate.
What this guide covers
I · Wired Connection (USB-C)
The simplest, lowest-latency path. Plug a USB-C cable from the controller into any USB-A or USB-C port on your PC. Windows 10 and 11 recognize the DualSense as a generic HID device immediately — no driver install needed.
What works out of the box:
- All face buttons, sticks, dpad, shoulder buttons, triggers
- Touchpad as a click target (works as a single button by default)
- PS button (registers as the “Guide” button on Xbox controllers)
What does NOT work without extra software:
- Adaptive trigger resistance
- Haptic feedback (controller acts as a basic rumble pad instead)
- Touchpad as a multi-touch input
- Audio jack (game audio routed through the controller’s headphone jack)
For Steam games, the basic wired connection is genuinely fine. For non-Steam games and the full feature set, see Sections III and IV.
II · Wireless via Bluetooth
The DualSense pairs to any Bluetooth-capable Windows PC. Latency is slightly worse than wired (~20ms vs ~5ms) but acceptable for most games.
Phase A · Pair the controller
Power off any wireless console
If your PS5 is on, the controller stays paired to it. Power down the PS5 (or unpair the controller via PS5 settings) before pairing to PC.
Put the DualSense into pairing mode
Hold the PS PS button + CREATE Create button together until the light bar starts pulsing rapidly white. About 3–5 seconds.
Open Windows Bluetooth settings
Select Wireless Controller
Windows lists it as “Wireless Controller” (not “DualSense” — Microsoft and Sony don’t talk to each other). Click to pair.
Verify the pairing
The light bar settles to solid blue. Open Settings › Game Controllers on Windows — the controller should appear with an OK status.
Phase B · Re-pair to console
To use the DualSense on PS5 again later: connect it to PS5 via USB-C cable once. PS5 takes priority and re-pairs immediately.
III · Steam Input — The Easy Path for Steam Games
Steam has the best DualSense support of any PC platform, and it works automatically.
Make sure these are checked:
- PlayStation Configuration Support (enables DualSense detection)
- Generic Gamepad Configuration Support (fallback for unrecognized controllers)
Steam reads the DualSense as a native PlayStation controller. PS button glyphs appear in supported games (Helldivers 2, Returnal PC port, Death Stranding Director’s Cut). Adaptive triggers and haptics work in titles that opted in.
For non-Steam games launched through Steam (added as “Non-Steam Game”), Steam Input still applies — same controller mapping, no setup.
IV · DS4Windows — For Non-Steam Games
For Epic, GOG, Battle.net, Riot, or any launcher that doesn’t use Steam Input, the DualSense doesn’t natively expose itself as a controller — it shows up as a generic HID device that some games don’t recognize. DS4Windows wraps it as a virtual Xbox 360 controller, which every Windows game understands.
Setup
Download DS4Windows
From the official GitHub at ryochan7/DS4Windows. Avoid third-party download sites — historical malware injection is a real risk.
Install ViGEmBus driver
DS4Windows prompts to install ViGEmBus on first launch. Approve. Reboot if asked.
Launch DS4Windows and connect the controller
Wired or wireless — DS4Windows recognizes both. The DualSense appears in the Controllers tab with battery level.
Pick a profile
Default profile maps to Xbox 360 layout (X→A, ○→B, □→X, △→Y). Most non-Steam games expect this. For specific games (Final Fantasy XIV, Genshin Impact, etc.), community profiles exist in DS4Windows’ profile picker.
Limitations of DS4Windows
- Adaptive trigger resistance: limited support. Some games can opt in via DS4Windows’ built-in trigger profiles, but it’s game-by-game.
- Native haptics: not preserved — DS4Windows downgrades haptics to standard rumble.
- Touchpad: works as a generic two-button input (left click / right click).
- Light bar: customizable per-profile.
For full feature fidelity (real adaptive triggers, native haptics), Steam Input is the better path. DS4Windows is the “works everywhere” fallback.
V · Adaptive Triggers and Haptics in Supported Titles
A handful of PC games support DualSense adaptive triggers and haptics natively when connected via USB-C (Bluetooth wireless does NOT support these features — limitation of the Bluetooth audio profile bandwidth).
Games confirmed to support adaptive triggers and haptics on PC (April 2026):
| Game | Triggers | Haptics | Connection required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Returnal | Yes | Yes | USB-C wired |
| Death Stranding Director's Cut | Yes | Yes | USB-C wired |
| Helldivers 2 | Yes | Yes | USB-C wired |
| Spider-Man Remastered | Yes | Yes | USB-C wired |
| The Last of Us Part I | Yes | Yes | USB-C wired |
| Cyberpunk 2077 | Partial | Yes | USB-C wired |
| Most other titles | No | Standard rumble only | Either |
If a game supports it, the feature works automatically with no settings toggle — connect via USB-C and start the game. Bluetooth users get standard rumble even in supported titles.
VI · Firmware Updates and Battery Management
Firmware updates
Sony ships occasional DualSense firmware updates that improve drift correction, latency, and Bluetooth stability. Since you’re not on PS5, you can’t update via console. Sony provides a Windows tool:
- Download the DualSense firmware updater from playstation.com/support/hardware/dualsense/firmware-update/
- Install
- Connect the controller via USB-C (wired only — updates don’t work over Bluetooth)
- Run the tool, which checks current firmware against latest, prompts to update if applicable
- Update takes 1–2 minutes. Don’t disconnect mid-update.
Battery life
- Wireless gaming: ~12–15 hours per charge
- Wired gaming: indefinite (cable charges while in use)
- Idle (turned on, no game): controller auto-sleeps after 10 minutes
- Battery degradation: noticeable after ~2 years of daily use; the battery is replaceable but not user-serviceable per Sony’s warranty
A docking charger that holds the controller in a stand is convenient if you have multiple controllers. The official Sony DualSense Charging Station↗ Sony works with PC-paired DualSense identically — it just charges, no data path needed.
When to consider an upgrade
The standard DualSense is excellent. The DualSense Edge↗ Amazon ($199) adds back paddles, swappable sticks, custom button mapping stored on the controller, and replaceable stick modules (the part that drifts first). Worth it for competitive players or anyone whose previous controller drifted within warranty.
VII · Troubleshooting
Controller pairs but games don’t see it
Light bar pulses red and disconnects
Adaptive triggers feel inconsistent
Bluetooth keeps disconnecting
Audio output through the controller doesn’t work
Closing
For Steam users: plug it in or pair it, and it works. Steam handles the rest. For everything else: DS4Windows is the workhorse. For full adaptive-trigger and haptic experience, the games that support it support it natively over USB-C — no setup beyond plugging in.
If you’re shopping for the controller itself, the standard DualSense↗ Amazon is the right pick for most. The DualSense Edge↗ Amazon is the right pick if you want back paddles and replaceable sticks.
For the inverse direction (Xbox controller on PS5/Switch/Mac), see Xbox Controller Everywhere. For broader PC tuning, see Windows 11 Gaming Optimization.