Quick answer
Start with the least destructive check, confirm the device state, and only then change settings. For this problem, the fastest route is usually: Use a data-capable USB-C cable. Hold Create and PS buttons for Bluetooth pairing. Enable Steam Input for games that need it.
Before you start
- Use a data-capable USB-C cable.
- Hold Create and PS buttons for Bluetooth pairing.
- Enable Steam Input for games that need it.
- Update controller firmware if detection is inconsistent.
Use the right cable
Some USB-C cables charge only and do not carry data. If Windows does not detect the controller by cable, try another cable before changing drivers.
A wired connection is best for first setup because it removes Bluetooth pairing from the troubleshooting list.
Pair over Bluetooth
Hold Create and PS until the light bar flashes. In Windows Bluetooth settings, add the controller when it appears.
If it was paired with a console recently, remove the old PC entry and pair again.
Make games recognize it
Steam can translate controller input for games that do not support DualSense directly. Enable Steam Input per game if buttons are wrong.
For non-Steam games, add them to Steam or use the game’s own controller settings.
Symptom checklist
| What you see | Most likely cause | First safe action |
|---|---|---|
| The device reacts, but the result is wrong | Wrong input, profile, mode, or account state | Confirm the visible setting before resetting anything |
| Nothing reacts at all | Power, cable, port, battery, or button issue | Test with a known good power source or cable |
| The problem comes back after reboot | Saved setting, weak signal, low storage, or failing accessory | Change one variable and write down what changed |
FAQ
- Why does the controller charge but not connect?
- The cable may be charge-only, or the USB port may not enumerate the device correctly. Try a known data cable.
- Does every PC game support adaptive triggers?
- No. Many games use basic controller input only, especially over Bluetooth.