March 10, 20224 yr Extremity Dead Zone will not stick for any controller on the PC version. Extremity Dead Zone will stick perfectly for any controller on the Xbox version. I have many controllers and I have both PC and Xbox versions, and have tested. If flying wth an Xbox controller (as is very common with MSFS on Xbox), then an Extremity Dead Zone on YAW is a must and also very helpful on aileron and elevator). 5800X3D, RTX4070, 600 Watt, one or two 1440p 32" screens, 64 GB RAM, 4 TB PCle 3 NVMe, Warthog throttle, VKB NXT EVO stick, Honeycomb Alpha yoke, CH quad, 3 Logitech panels, 2 StreamDecks, Desktop Aviator Trim Panel. Crystal Light VR.
March 11, 20224 yr Yeah, same for me in the sensitivity settings, have to reset the reactivity setting everytime MSFS is run. They are very niggly faults these kind of bugs aren't they?🤔
March 11, 20224 yr 11 hours ago, Bobsk8 said: The worst part about this, is they have a beta team now, and the beta team reports a problem that they discover as in the case, and the update is released with the problem never being fixed. In the old FS days Microsoft had a dedicated beta-team, of which I was one (FS2 thru FSX), as well. The FlightSimulator development team, who were stationed at the Microsoft Campus in Redmond after BAO was acquired, listened to their beta testers and in most cases fixed the "undocumented features" that were found before releasing the product. That beta test team had to sign a strict NDA and this NDA only was lifted after the release-candidate was in fact being released to the community. Perhaps they (MS/Asobo) still have a dedicated beta tester team, but now they also have simmers (and gamers) out of this here forum participate in what they call beta testing and I have the impression they just have these testers to give the community the impression, that they are being heard. After release proving that they couldn't care less in some cases what their testers have been reporting. I have got the impression, that MS/Asobo now is following one of the principles described in the book "In Search Of Excellence" in which it is explained that it used to be a Japanese phenomenon to follow the principle of "fire and then aim, rather than aim and then fire", i.e. just throw something in the world and we will see what the world has got to say about this product and we then can repair it 🙂 . (This book was released in the mid '80s, but MS/Asobo still hold tight to it 🙂 ) Just my $0.02 Kind regards, Hans van WIjhe Acer Predator P03-640 2.10 Ghz Intel 12th Gen Core 17-12700F 64GB memory, Noctua NH-U9S Cooler, 1.02 TB SSD HD, 1.02 TB HD, NVidia Geforce RTX 3070 16GB Memory, Windows 11 (x64)
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