By now you have learned the raw basics of setting up and using the steam controller with the Dolphin emulator. Now that you are jumping around and spraying your water like a champ, you want to play a multiplayer game with a friend. Dual Stage triggers, if you followed my guide more or less precisely, will only work on player one. Dolphin is an emulator that has been around for several years on PC and allows you to play Nintendo Wii and GameCube games. There is a version of this for iOS, meaning you can play your favorite Wii and GameCube games on your iPhone, iPad or iPod touch wherever you want.
- How To Add Switch Pro Controller To Dolphin Emulator Mac Torrent
- How To Use Nintendo Switch Pro Controller On Dolphin
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- How to Speed Up Dolphin Emulator on a Slow Computer
- Dolphin 5.0 Best Settings is an open-source emulator that allows games for the Nintendo GameCube, Nintendo Wii, and Nintendo Wii U consoles to be played on a PC. The emulator offers unique Dolphin enhancements that allow older games to be played with enhanced visuals and performance tweaks. However, because the Nintendo consoles that Dolphin emulates are drastically different than an average computer, even decade-old Wii games can put strain on a high-performance computer. On a slower or older system, fine-tuning your Dolphin emulator settings will be key to ensure that games can be played without too much lag interfering with the gameplay experience.
- The Dolphin Emulator is among the most popular, if not the most popular, on the scene. This is because of an unprecedented level of accuracy, performance features, and enhancement capabilities. What started as a humble GameCube emulator became the premiere GameCube and Wii emulator before the latter system’s console cycle was even finished!Dolphin is an open-source, cross-platform project, which means it’s available on all kinds of hardware. More recent versions only support 64-bit Windows, Mac OS X, Linux and Android operating systems, though.For the sake of simplicity, this guide will assume that you’re using Windows 10, the most-used desktop operating system at the time of writing. Much of the wisdom learned here can be applied to installation and configuration on other operating systems as well, and we even have an Ubuntu Linux installation guide here.I’d still recommend following this guide’s post-installation steps to learn more about configuration, though, especially graphics settings.
Basic Speed Solutions
There are a few simple ways to increase the speed of games running in Dolphin. Before adjusting any settings, close any additional programs or windows open alongside Dolphin: because the emulator uses a computer’s CPU more than it does the video card, running other programs simultaneously will reduce the amount of processing power available for the game you wish to play. At the same time, adjusting game window size and – in the settings accessed by clicking the “Graphics” tab in the main Dolphin menu – reducing the display resolution can quickly speed up a game emulated in Dolphin. Turning off the V-Sync and Anti-Aliasing features may also improve game performance, though it will come at the cost of visual quality.Turn Off Dolphin Enhancements
One of the most effective ways to speed up Dolphin on a slower machine is to turn off Dolphin enhancements from the emulator’s “Graphics” menu. Though running GameCube, Wii, and Wii U games at a higher visual quality than the original consoles could manage is one of the appeals of the Dolphin emulator, these enhancements can overwhelm an older or less-powerful CPU, particularly if it is only a dual-core system. Turning these enhancements off from the “Graphics” menu will often lead to an increase in game speed.In the worst-case scenario, reducing Dolphin emulator lag may require you to upgrade the hardware in your computer – or, if using a laptop that cannot have its parts swapped out, it may require upgrading your entire system. This can be frustrating, given that some of the games Dolphin emulates are nearly 20 years old, but the emulator is incredibly CPU-intensive: system recommendations suggest using a quad-core CPU, and the emulator needs a dual-core at minimum to function. Adjusting emulator settings can help in getting a game just above your system’s capabilities to run adequately, but only so much can be done if your hardware cannot keep up with the emulator’s demands.
System Requirements
Every game has different requirements, some titles may require a powerful computer while some other titles may not. Generally, these are the minimum recommended requirements for Dolphin.
- OS: 64-bit edition of Windows (7 SP1 or higher), Linux, or macOS (10.10 Yosemite or higher). Windows Vista SP2 and unix-like systems other than Linux are not officially supported but might work.
- Processor: A CPU with SSE2 support. A modern CPU (3 GHz and Dual Core, not older than 2008) is highly recommended.
- Graphics: A reasonably modern graphics card (Direct3D 10.0 / OpenGL 3.0). A graphics card that supports Direct3D 11 / OpenGL 4.4 is recommended.
Dolphin Configuration
Dolphin is shipped with default settings for the most optimal performance, you do not usually need to change anything on your first time Dolphin setup.
Enable Dual Core
Provides a significant speedup on modern systems. Recommended on most titles, though may cause issues like crashing or graphic issues on some titles.
CPU Emulator Engine
JIT Recompiler is the fastest engine and is recommended on almost all titles. There are a few titles that work better with different emulator engines but unplayably slow.
Audio
DSP HLE is the fastest DSP Emulator Engine. It is very reliable, and only a few titles still have problems with it. See DSP LLE for more details. Cubeb is the faster backend. Recommended on almost all titles.
Graphics Settings
Some of these settings will improve emulation compatibility in exchange of PC performance.
General
- Depending of the game and the graphics card: OpenGL or Direct3D 11 in backend setting will offer better performance. Vulkan is still in experimental phase and it still is not recommended.
- V-Sync helps prevent screen tearing.
- Use Fullscreen toggles between fullscreen and windowed mode.
Enhancements
The emulation can suffer slowdowns from extreme multiplier options in Internal Resolution,Anisotropic Filtering, and Anti-Aliasing settings. Start with minimum option like “1x Native (640×528)”, and go up from there until you can find the highest setting without slowdown. Keep in mind non-1x options may cause graphical issues in some titles.
Hacks
- Skip EFB Access from CPU – Provides a speed boost. However it provides this boost at the expense of emulation accuracy, breaking some titles and removing effects. It’s off by default for greater emulation accuracy.
- Ignore Format Changes – The vast majority of titles don’t care about this, and it provides a small boost. However a small number of titles hate this setting. It’s enabled by default.
- Store EFB Copies to Texture Only – Enabled by default. Disable it only when running a game that requires it. Refer this page for a list of titles that require disabling it.
- Texture Cache – Setting the slider on the “Fast” position will improve performance greatly, but it may cause graphical glitches in some games (Most commonly missing text).
- Fast Depth Calculation – Uses a less accurate method of calculating depth values. Gives a small speedup, but can cause flickering textures.
- Disable Bounding Box – Don’t emulate bounding box calculation, which is only required for a limited set of titles, mostly Paper Mario titles.
- Vertex Rounding – Rounding 2D vertices to whole pixels, fixes graphical glitches seen in several titles at higher internal resolutions.
Install Dolphin Emulator on Your PC
When installing Dolphin Emulator, you have two options: a Stable version and a Development version. Stable versions are released once every year or two, while Development versions can be released multiple times within the same day.
If you want to play it super-safe, you can use a Stable version, but I highly recommend simply using the latest Development version and updating once every week/two weeks. Issues don’t arise often in Development versions, and when they do they are quickly fixed.
Head to the Dolphin download page and select which version you want to install. At the time of writing, Dolphin 5.0-5994 is the most recent, so we’ll be installing that one in this guide.
Click “Windows x64.” Dolphin will download in a 7z archive which can be extracted using either 7-Zip or WinRAR. 7-Zip has some of the best performance out there and is free, though, so we recommend it. You’ll need to decide where to place this archive – I recommend setting aside a folder especially for Dolphin and your games. For me, this is a folder on a secondary hard drive named “GameCube and Wii.”
Hit “Save,” open up the folder where you placed your Dolphin archive and extract it.
Inside the folder you’ve extracted (I recommend choosing “Extract to dolphin-master-your-version” so it’s easy to switch between versions later on), go inside the “Dolphin-x64” folder and click your Dolphin executable to launch it for the first time.
And you’re in!
You’ll see that I have quite the collection of games despite this being a new version of Dolphin for me. This is because, regardless of where you actually install your versions of Dolphin, all of your configuration files will be kept in “My Documents -> Dolphin Emulator.” When using custom textures and saving configuration files, make sure that you place them there so they will be usable across your entire Dolphin installation.
Add Games to Dolphin Emulator
Start by selecting “Config.”
Now, click “Paths.”
Click “Add,” then add the folder where you’re storing your games.
Note: acquiring games is your own responsibility – do so by legally extracting them from a Wii console. We are not liable if you choose to use other methods!
In the main menu click “Refresh,” and you should now see a list of all the games Dolphin found in that directory.
If you don’t see banners for some of your games, don’t worry – those will appear after you launch them, play them and create a save file.
Configure Game-by-Game Settings
One of the problems with emulation is that even after all these years, it’s not an exact science. Some games work better with one graphics backend, others with another one. Some games can run at 60fps with full antialiasing, others can’t.
This means that sometimes you’ll have to tweak an individual game’s config file so that your main settings get overridden for that one game.
To change the settings for an individual game, right-click it in the Dolphin main menu, click Properties, and then under the GameConfig tab click “Edit Config.”
You’ll be presented with a big blank notepad document where you can enter ini overrides for any setting you want.
Enter them by writing the heading in square brackets, followed by the INI tweak as per the wiki page. So to force “TimeSplitters: Future Perfect” to play on widescreen and on the DirectX11 backend, it’d look like the box below.
Once you’ve entered all the overrides you want, save and exit the Notepad file. To remove your tweaks, simply come back to this file and delete whatever changes you made.
Checking Game Compatibility
Before playing anything in Dolphin Emulator, you should check its compatibility. You can do this by searching for it on the Dolphin Wiki or right-clicking a game’s entry and selecting “Wiki.”
The game’s Wiki page will provide you all the information you need to know on compatibility issues in Dolphin, as well as information and links to enhancements, widescreen codes and more. Use this information to ensure your settings are compatible with the games you’re playing!
Configure Controllers in Dolphin Emulator
Dolphin Emulator is primarily for playing games, but before you can play any of those, you’ll need to configure your controllers.
Before we dive straight into configurations themselves, check if you have any of the following controllers on hand:
- An XInput-compatible controller – Xbox 360, Xbox One + S/X, many Logitech gamepads. XInput gamepads will be recognized by default but must be configured manually or with an .ini file.
- A PlayStation 3/4 controller – These can be recognized as XInput controllers using the ScpToolkit.
- A GameCube controller – Using the Wii U GameCube Controller Adapter or its Mayflash counterpart, Dolphin will be able to recognize your controller after some configuration.
- A Wii Remote – Using a Bluetooth adapter and the “Real Wiimote” option in your settings, you can sync a real Wiimote. You’ll need to get a wireless sensor bar alongside that, though, or opt for the Mayflash DolphinBar which doubles as a Bluetooth receiver for your Wiimote.
So you’ll need, for the most part, either the real thing or an XInput-compatible gamepad to have anything resembling an authentic experience with Dolphin. Without those you’ll need to use a mouse/keyboard setup, which I generally don’t recommend for anyone outside of a few scenarios (like for Metroid Prime Trilogy, an FPS title).
Fortunately for you, I’m going to provide you with some ready-to-use profiles that will be immediately compatible with any XInput-enabled controller connected to your system. These profiles will support the following:
- A GameCube controller profile
- A Wii Classic controller profile
- A specialized Super Mario Galaxy 1/2 profile which maps all functions to a normal XInput gamepad. Most notable changes are star-bit pointer to the right analog stick, shake/skin to the X button and jump to the A button.
There are a number of other profiles for you to download and use at your own volition, but these should suit you for most of the games you’ll be playing on Dolphin. I highly recommend investing in actual controllers and adapters to play it all, though.
Loading configuration files in Dolphin is fortunately pretty simple. First, make sure that “Standard Controller” and “Emulated Wii Remote” are selected in their respective drop-downs like the image below.
On either of these all you need to do is click “Configure.” Select your XInput Gamepad under “Device” and the profile of your choice under “Profile,” and click Load to automatically apply all of my settings for your usage.
You’re welcome to tweak any of these as you like and either overwrite my provided profiles or create your own. Humbly speaking, I think mine are a pretty great place to start.
A Guide to Dolphin Emulator Graphics Settings
Open your Graphics menu, and let’s walk through all of the important settings.
General
Backend Options
- OpenGL – The most well-supported Backend, it should give good performance and provide minimal in-game issues.
- DirectX 11 – Falls right behind OpenGL in terms of support and may provide better or worse performance depending on the game.
- Vulkan – Is labeled “experimental” for a reason. Can provide great performance increases but is also a lot more prone to glitches and errors than the other backends.
- Software Renderer – Is very slow, doesn’t offer enhancements and will try to play exactly like the Wii/GameCube. Only useful for developers – no reason to use this.
- Null – Does nothing.
Fullscreen Resolution can be set either to “Auto” or your native resolution. I set mine to the latter for Shadowplay recordings, but if you aren’t recording your Dolphin gameplay you shouldn’t need to worry about this.
Aspect Ratio is best left on “Auto” since it may change depending on the game.
V-Sync will reduce screen-tearing at the cost of some performance. Enable if you can handle that; otherwise leave it alone if it causes lag spikes in-game.
Using Fullscreen will make your games automatically launch in Fullscreen. You can use this if you like, but Alt + Enter and the FullScr button in Dolphin’s main interface can do this for you as well.
The “Other” options are all pretty self-explanatory. I recommend enabling “Show FPS” while experimenting with settings and disabling it once you know what works for your system. Leave the others alone unless you know what you’re doing.
Enhancements
Internal Resolution corresponds to game resolution. I recommend starting at 2x Native as a baseline and moving up until you start seeing performance hitches. This will have the biggest effect on your FPS.
Anti-Aliasing will reduce “jaggies” in an image, making it clearer and sharper. It is very performance-intensive, however, so I advise leaving it off or adjusting it after you’ve found a comfortable resolution for your play.
Anisotropic Filtering is pretty much free visual fidelity on PC. Set to 16x or 8x if that gives you performance problems.
Ubershaders will add shader compilation to your initial game launches but will otherwise save you lag spikes in games that are prone to it, like Xenoblade or the Metroid Prime Trilogy. I recommend setting this to “Hybrid” if you have a modern GPU.
Post-Processing Effects will add post-processing to your images. I don’t personally care for it, and it may impact performance slightly, but you’re welcome to experiment with it if you like. The FXAA option is a lightweight way to add some AA, for instance.
As for the other enhancements:
- Scaled EFB Copy and Per-Pixel Lighting will ensure better visuals at little to no cost to performance or compatibility. Leave enabled.
- Force Texture Filtering will boost visuals but can cause issues – especially in games like Mario Sunshine. Leave this disabled.
- Widescreen Hack can give some great results, but in general you’re better off applying game-specific widescreen codes instead. Leave this disabled.
- Disable Fog may look nice but will break games that use it actively, like Silent Hill or Resident Evil. Leave this alone.
- Force 24-Bit Color will make your game look more vibrant at little to no performance cost. Leave enabled.
Stereoscopy really only applies to those using 3D monitors or Virtual Reality headsets. That’s enough content for an article all on its own, so we’re going to leave that alone for now.
Hacks
Skip EFB Access From CPU can give performance gains but damages compatibility and playability. Leave unchecked.
Ignore Format Changes improves performance with minimal to no downsides. It may need to be disabled for a few games out there but none that I’ve played.
Filezilla pro for mac torrent. Store EFB Copies to Texture Only offers higher performance but lower accuracy. (Most notably, things like save-file screenshots won’t work with this enabled.) This setting is fine in most cases but may need to be disabled on a per-game basis.
Texture Cache is best left on Fast with GPU Texture Decoding enabled for those with discrete GPUs.
XFB is best left on Disable unless a specific game requires it enabled.
All options under “Other” will provide visual and performance improvements in all but a few titles.
Advanced
Most things here should be left alone unless you’re a developer.
However, enable “Load Custom Textures” and “Prefetch Custom Textures” if you’ll be using them. “Enable Progressive Scan” is safe to enable but won’t do anything in most games.
About Other Dolphin Emulator Enhancements
Advanced enhancements involve using special codes and texture packs with your games in Dolphin to bring them to new heights. Unfortunately, the installation and configuration process will change depending on what game you’re playing, but if you find these enhancements, online tutorials will be included alongside them.
The following is an example on my own PC. This is Super Mario Sunshine, upscaled to 1080p, using a widescreen code, a 60 FPS code, and an HD texture pack to make the visuals pop. I highly recommend watching this video, fullscreen, at 1080p 60fps for the full experience.
This will look much better when played in-game. Rendering and compression of this footage have somewhat compromised the visual fidelity of the footage above, but this should still give you a strong idea of just what can be done with Dolphin enhancements.
Conclusion
There are definitely some more Dolphin Emulator topics I’d like to cover in more detail in the future, but this should be all you need to get started using Dolphin to play and enhance all of your favorite Wii and GameCube titles. Comment below if you need assistance with anything Dolphin-related, or tell us what you’ll be playing!
Author’s Opinion regarding the Dolphin 5.0 Best Settings For Slow PC
The Dolphin 5.0 Best Settings For Slow PC has very strong features, while considering the security purpose, priority is very high. No VPN or RDP are required for the said purpose. In some cases, emulator also working fine and middleware software also have the important role for smooth functioning. Therefore, author recommended the Dolphin 5.0 Best Settings For Slow PC for your personal use and has no issue regarding the installation on PC (Windows and Mac). I hope you also use it without any trouble, if you have any issue, please mentioned in the email, we will provide you answer with proper solutions. Please like and share with other, we did lot of efforts during the collections of the software for your download.
This page explains how to configure controllers in Dolphin, assuming the controller is connected and working with your system. If you need help, or want game-specific configurations, see the forums.
- 2GameCube Controller
- 3Wii Remote
- 3.1Real Wii Remote
Dolphin Controller Configuration
To open and manage the controller settings for Dolphin, from the Dolphin's main window, navigate to Options -> Controller Settings, or simply click the 'Controllers' button. The main controller configuration window will appear, as seen in the screenshot below.
In the Gamecube Controllers config area, you can configure or disable the emulated GameCube controller ports. The emulated GameCube controllers themselves are referred to as 'Standard Controller' in the dropdown menu. The controller order on the PC does not have to equal to GameCube controller port order. They will be handled entirely in the GameCube Controller Configuration window. It is within each port's own 'Configure' button.
In the Wii Controllers config area, you have the option to use real or emulated Wii Remotes, as well as choosing to passthrough a Bluetooth Adapter (see Bluetooth Passthrough) or emulating the Wii's adapter. You can also assign the Wii Remote to connect it as an emulated controller by selecting 'Connect Wii Remotes for Emulated Controllers'. Select 'Real Wii Remote' in the dropdown for a Wii Remote slot to use a real-world Wii Remote connected to your PC via bluetooth for that slot. Dolphin supports up to four Wii Remotes at once, along with any peripherals you have attached to them. Although the Balance Board cannot be emulated, Dolphin allows the use of a real-world Balance Board by selecting 'Real Balance Board'. Enable Speaker Data controls whether the Wii Remote speaker can produce sound. When using a real Wii Remote, the audio will come out of the Wii Remotes' speakers; with emulated Wii Remotes, it will come out of the system speakers. Some games, like Metroid Prime 3, have lag issues when Enable Speaker Data is enabled on some systems.
In the Common config area, you can choose options that would both affect Gamecube and Wii controllers. Background Input lets you use the controller or keyboard even if Dolphin isn't in focus. Alternate Input Sources allows the use of capturing motion data from other hardware inputs into Dolphin. See DSU Client for more details.
After you select what you want to use, check in the section(s) below for additional configuration.
GameCube Controller
Real GameCube Controller (GameCube Adapter)
To use the actual GameCube Controllers using an Official GameCube Controller Adapter for Wii U (and its clones), see How to use the Official GameCube Controller Adapter for Wii U in Dolphin. It does not require any button configuration. That does not apply to the adapters that behave as generic controllers and need to be configured (see below).
Emulated GameCube Controller
After setting any one of the emulated GameCube ports, proceed to the 'Configure' button for each. One left unconfigured will be considered dummy 'plugged in' during the game emulation.
Choose any device that is connected to your PC in the Device dropdown, and set the buttons and axes to your liking.
- Left click a slot to detect input, then press a button/key or axes on your selected device to save it to that slot.
- Middle click a slot to clear it of inputs.
- Right click a slot to show more input options. See Input Syntax for documentation and examples.
If you controller supports it, Rumble will allow your controller to experience the GameCube controller's rumble functionality. Within the rumble configuration window, click on the motor pattern you wish to use (sine, cosine, etc), and press 'Select' to apply it. If you wish to add a second pattern, click another pattern and press '| OR'. Hit 'OK' to accept the changes and exit the window.
Control Stick Calibration limits the radius of the joystick input. This is used to map the dimensions of the input source.
Always Connected forces the emulated controller to stay connected to the emulated Gamecube.
Profile allows you to save/load input configs.
After setting up everything that you want, click 'OK' and the changes will save.
NOTE: If the controller is significantly off center in Dolphin but nowhere else, check all controller axis to see if one has a '+-' on it . This is not supposed to happen and is the source of your bug.
Wii Remote
Real Wii Remote
To connect a Wii Remote, press 'Refresh' then press the 1 + 2 buttons on your Wii Remote simultaneously (Sync button for -TR models). Continuous Scanning allows you to connect a Wii Remote without having to open the Wii Remote window and press refresh every time. As long as a game is running or the Wii Remote configuration window is up, just press 1 + 2 or the sync button on your Wii Remote simultaneously and it will connect.
After several minutes of inactivity, Wii titles will attempt to disconnect the Wii Remote. The Wii Remote will remain on and connected to Dolphin, but the game will believe it is disconnected. To 'reconnect' the Wii Remote, go to Tools -> Connect Wii Remotes -> Connect Wii Remote # or use a hotkey corresponding to it (example - the Windows default for Wii Remote 1 is Alt-F5), or simply press a button on the Wii Remote.
Dolphin does not automatically turn off Wii Remotes as the Wii will (except on Linux). Remember to turn off controllers on your own to save battery power, simply by holding the power button on Wii Remote for a second as you would to turn off the Wii. It will also tell Dolphin that it's disconnected instead of stopping the game emulation.
Couldn't Connect
Wii Remotes use the Bluetooth interface, make sure your PC supports Bluetooth. Do not pair the Wii Remote to your computer through its native Bluetooth settings. The operating system may interfere with Dolphin's ability to connect with the Wii Remote. In addition, Wii Remote connectivity will only work if one of the Wii Remote slots is set to Real Wii Remote and it's not claimed by another Wii Remote.
If the remote does not seem to want to connect, make sure that any real Wiis in proximity are switched off for the duration of the pairing process.
RVL-CNT-01-TR Wii Remote Pluses may need extra configuration for older versions of Windows, see the Wii Remote Plus (RVL-CNT-01-TR) Connection Guide.
Emulated Wii Remote
The configuration window for emulated Wii Remote works in the same way as the GameCube controller settings.
Choose any device that is connected to your PC in the Device dropdown, and set the buttons and axes to your liking.
- Left click a slot to detect input, then press a button/key or axes on your selected device to save it to that slot.
- Middle click a slot to clear it of inputs.
- Right click a slot to show more input options. See Input Syntax for documentation and examples.
Extension Allows you to add an emulated Nunchuk, Guitar, or other Wii Remote peripheral. Select the extension you want to emulate in the dropdown, and press configure to open a window with slots just like the Emulated Wii Remote window. Select buttons and axes as you wish, and press OK to save. If you wish to attach a MotionPlus to the emulated Wii Remote, select 'Attach MotionPlus'.
If you controller supports it, Rumble will allow your controller to experience the Wii Remote's rumble functionality. Within the rumble configuration window, click on the motor pattern you wish to use (sine, cosine, etc), and press 'Select' to apply it. If you wish to add a second pattern, click another pattern and press '| OR'. Hit 'OK' to accept the changes and exit the window.
Speaker Pan allows you to shift the emulated Wii Remote audio to the left or the right on your system speakers, if Enable Speaker Data is checked. -100% is left, 0 is centered, and +100% is right.
Battery allows you to change the battery level of the emulated Wii Remote.
Upright Wii Remote alters the base swinging and tilting orientation of the emulated Wii Remote to the upright position.
Sideways Wii Remote changes the emulated Wii Remote controls to allow you to play games as though the Wii Remote is sideways, without actually changing your controls. It is useful for games such as New Super Mario Bros. Wii that are designed for it.
Profile allows you to save/load input configs.
After setting up everything that you want, click 'OK' and the changes will save.
General Settings
These settings apply to both Emulated and Real Wii Remotes.
Sensor Bar Position, IR Sensitivity, Speaker Volume, and Wii Remote Motor are duplicates of Wii settings. They do exactly what they say they do, and work exactly like the same settings on the Wii itself.
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Hotkey Settings
Dolphin has preloaded user-configurable hotkeys only found under Options > Hotkey Settings. This has great use for Hotkey and Tool-Assisted Speedrun users, and it is required for Free Look (if enabled under Utility section in Options > Graphics Settings > 'Advanced' tab) and a way to exit Fullscreen.
Choose any device that is connected to your PC in the Device dropdown, and set the buttons and axes to your liking.
- Left click a slot to detect input, then press a button/key or axes on your selected device to save it to that slot.
- Middle click a slot to clear it of inputs.
- Right click a slot to show more input options. See Input Syntax for documentation and examples.
There is no way to map hotkeys on the native controllers.
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