The most complete free PS5 DualSense test tool online. Test every button on your PS5 controller — Cross, Circle, Square, Triangle, L1/R1, L2/R2 adaptive triggers, L3/R3 stick clicks, D-pad, touchpad, Create, Options, and PS button. Check analog stick drift, trigger analog range, gyroscope motion, haptic rumble motors, and more — all directly in your browser on PC or Mac. No download, no PS5 console needed, no sign-up required.
dual-rumble API works in Chrome and Edge. Advanced DualSense-specific audio-based haptics require the PS5 console or DualSenseX on PC.The PS5 DualSense is the most feature-rich consumer controller ever made. Here is every hardware feature and what our tester checks.
Each trigger contains a small electric motor and worm gear that physically alters the trigger's resistance mid-press. Games can create resistance zones, spring effects, or trigger locks. This tester reads the 0–100% analog value. Physical resistance requires PS5 or DualSenseX on PC.
Two linear resonant actuators (LRAs) replace the traditional spinning motors. They respond to audio waveforms, enabling textures (sand, wood, metal), precise impact simulation, and individual left/right feedback. Standard dual-rumble works via browser; audio haptics require USB and PS5.
A 3-axis gyroscope (pitch, roll, yaw) and 3-axis accelerometer form the DualSense's IMU. The gyro polls at 250Hz over Bluetooth. It enables gyro aiming in games like Fortnite and GT7. Testable via Chrome on macOS/Linux Bluetooth, or Steam Input on Windows.
A large capacitive touchpad sits between the two grips. It registers as a clickable button (button 17) in the Gamepad API. Full multi-touch X/Y tracking requires WebHID in Chrome. The touchpad can swipe to open the map in Ghost of Tsushima, or swipe patterns in other titles.
Two analog sticks with 0.001 axis resolution and 250Hz polling rate. Each stick also functions as a digital click button (L3/R3). The DualSense is more prone to stick drift than DualShock 4 due to its potentiometer design — use this tester to catch early drift before it affects gameplay.
The DualSense includes a built-in microphone array and speaker. The speaker routes game audio — gun sounds in Returnal, dialogue in Astro's Playroom. The mic mute button has an LED indicator. Both are hardware features not accessible via the Gamepad API — use OS audio settings to test.
Complete PS5 controller test in under 5 minutes — no PS5 console required.
Connect your PS5 DualSense via USB-C cable directly to your PC (recommended — ensures full haptic and trigger support) or pair it via Bluetooth in Windows/macOS Bluetooth settings. Open Gamepad Tester in Chrome or Edge. Press any button to wake the Gamepad API. The status badge changes to "Connected" instantly.
Select the "All Buttons" tab. Press each button one at a time — Cross (✕), Circle (○), Square (□), Triangle (△), L1, R1, L2 (click), R2 (click), L3, R3, D-Up, D-Down, D-Left, D-Right, Create, Options, PS, and Touchpad. Each button lights up red when registered. A button that stays dark is dead, stuck, or the contact needs cleaning.
Switch to the "Analog Sticks" tab. Set the controller flat on a surface and leave both sticks completely untouched for 10 seconds. Watch the idle drift value. Under 0.03 is normal sensor noise. Above 0.08 consistently means early drift. Above 0.15 means advanced drift that is likely visible in gameplay. The DualSense is more prone to drift than DualShock 4 — early detection prevents ruined sessions.
Switch to the "L2 / R2 Triggers" tab. Squeeze each trigger slowly from 0% to 100% and release. The bar should fill and return smoothly. Confirm L2 and R2 both read 0% at rest and reach close to 100% at full press. A trigger stuck above 2% at rest has spring drift. A trigger not reaching 90% at full press has mechanical wear or debris.
Switch to "Haptic / Rumble" and press "Test Haptic". Hold the controller in both hands — you should feel vibration in both grips. Use the Strong/Weak sliders to test each motor's intensity independently. If one grip is completely silent at 100%, that motor is dead. Try the Heartbeat and Gunshot patterns to stress-test rapid cycling. Requires USB-C for best haptic intensity on DualSense.
Test your DualSense entirely on PC or Mac — no PlayStation 5 needed. Just connect via USB-C or Bluetooth and all buttons, sticks, triggers, and basic haptics are fully testable in the browser.
Every button press, stick position, and trigger value is processed locally in your browser via the Web Gamepad API. No controller data is ever sent to any server — your inputs stay entirely on your device.
Buttons, sticks, drift, triggers, haptics, gyroscope, and touchpad — all in six tabbed panels on one page. No need for multiple tools or separate apps to get a complete DualSense diagnostic.
The DualSense polls at 250Hz (every 4ms) over USB — faster than Xbox's 125Hz. Gamepad Tester reads every state change at this rate, giving you the most accurate real-time button and trigger readings available in a browser.
The DualSense Edge (PS5 Pro controller with swappable stick modules, back buttons, and adjustable trigger stops) is fully supported. All standard inputs register identically to the base DualSense. Pro hardware features require Sony's companion app or the PS5 console.
Every button press, trigger change, and haptic fire is recorded in the input log with a millisecond timestamp. This makes it easy to catch intermittent faults — buttons that fail occasionally rather than consistently — which are often missed in a brief manual test.
Gamepad Tester — free browser-based PS5 DualSense controller test. Works on PC and Mac via Chrome or Edge. No PS5 console required. Tests buttons, sticks, triggers, haptics, gyroscope, and touchpad via Web Gamepad API. All data processed locally. · ← Back to Gamepad Tester