Forget ray tracing and SSD-fueled load times for a second. The single most memorable thing about the PlayStation 5 isn’t on screen at all — it’s in your hands. The DualSense controller’s adaptive triggers and granular haptic feedback turned a familiar gamepad into something that actually communicates with the game, and it remains Sony’s cleverest PS5 innovation.
The catch has always been the PC. Plug a DualSense into a Windows machine and it works — you get a controller, buttons, sticks, the basics. But the headline features that make the thing special have been locked behind a tether. Until now, Sony only enabled its full feature package over a wired USB connection, leaving wireless players with a stripped-down experience.
That’s the wall that’s finally coming down. The full DualSense feature set is becoming available wirelessly on PC — meaning the adaptive triggers and haptics that define the controller no longer demand a cable snaking across your desk. It’s the kind of fix players have been asking for since the controller first landed on PC, and it removes the most annoying compromise of using Sony’s pad away from a console.
The trade-off, as is so often the case, is your wallet. The wireless feature support isn’t simply being flipped on for free — you’ll have to pay for it. Sony is gating the experience behind a cost rather than rolling it out as a blanket update, so the convenience of going untethered comes with a price attached.
It’s a slightly awkward position to be in. The hardware is already in players’ hands, the features already exist, and the only thing standing between a wired and wireless experience is software permission. For players who’ve spent years cursing the USB requirement, the news is genuinely welcome — the DualSense is at its best when nothing physical reminds you it’s plugged into anything.
For everyone else, it raises the obvious question of whether paying for a capability the controller already possesses feels fair. Either way, the practical upshot is clear:
- All DualSense features — including adaptive triggers and haptics — now work wirelessly on PC
- Previously, full feature support on PC required a wired USB connection
- Unlocking the wireless experience comes at a cost rather than being free
However you feel about the pricing, this is the missing piece that finally lets the PS5’s standout accessory deliver its complete experience on PC without a leash. The DualSense was always too good to leave shackled to a cable — now it doesn’t have to be.