Sony now lets you use the DualSense pad to play PS5 on your nearby Mac, iPhone, iPad, and more
Sony now lets you use the DualSense pad to play PS5 on your nearby
Mac, iPhone, iPad, and more
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It’s a little-known fact that you can sling a PS5 or PS4 to
another room of your house, streaming your games to a Mac or Windows PC, iOS or Android device, or even an old PS4 with Sony’s PS Remote Play
app. But until recently, you could only remotely control your shiny new
PlayStation 5 with the old DualShock 4 gamepad.
That’s now changing, as Sony has just announced the PS5’s new
DualShock controller is supported across every Apple platform running the latest operating system,
including iPhones, iPads, iPod touches, and Apple TVs running 14.5 and Macs
running macOS Big Sur 11.3.
I just gave it a quick try myself with an iPhone 12 mini and a
recent iPad Pro, and I have some thoughts!
The good news: if the only controller you own is a DualSense
controller, it totally works — and your awesome adaptive triggers come along for
the ride.
Here is some bad news:
- There’s
no haptic feedback. Absolutely zero. It feels extremely weird.
- Each
time you want to switch devices (to your iPhone or back to your PS5),
you’ll have to manually pair your DualSense again. That was true of previous
pads as well, but I was hoping they’d fix it.
- The
built-in microphone, headphone jack, and speaker don’t work. The speaker
is a serious loss — games like Returnal use
it in combination with haptic feedback to add some serious immersion.
- The
streaming quality, as always, will depend heavily on your home wireless
network. Give it a try, though; it’s free!
You’ll have to decide whether these things
defeat the purpose of pairing a DualSense with an Apple device. As far as I’m
concerned, I’ll keep my DualSense hooked up to the PS5 where it can actually
help me sense things, and use a DualShock 4 (or third-party pad) when I want to
stream.
It’s also more ammunition for the argument
that we should be able to play PS5 games on our PS5 with a PS4 pad. This
is the second time Sony has shown that limitation is totally arbitrary: first
when it allowed us to control PS5 games with the PS4 controller over Remote
Play to start, and now again with this signal that the
DualSense’s sensing abilities are optional when streaming games over a network.
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