Hyperkin competition xbox controller hall effect drift free sticks playstation announcement specs – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Hyperkin’s new Xbox controller has drift-free sticks in a PlayStation-style layout

The Hyperkin Competitor was first teased back in 2019, but now it’s finally official and with a Hall effect upgrade.

The Hyperkin Competitor was first teased back in 2019, but now it’s finally official and with a Hall effect upgrade.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

The Hyperkin Competition controller in blue, on a white background.
The Hyperkin Competition controller in blue, on a white background.
A licensed Xbox controller with a bit of a PlayStation vibe.
Image: Hyperkin
Antonio G. Di Benedetto
is a reviewer covering laptops and the occasional gadget. He spent over 15 years in the photography industry before joining The Verge as a deals writer in 2021.

Third-party controller makers are continuing to pick up the slack from Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo when it comes to making more durable, drift-proof controllers. Hyperkin is announcing the Competitor, an Xbox-licensed wired controller for Xbox Series X / S and PC with a PlayStation-like symmetrical stick layout that you don’t commonly find on Xbox gamepads. But, more importantly, it uses both Hall effect sensors for its sticks and impact triggers to minimize long-term wear and tear.

Related

The Competitor was once quietly teased way back in the Before Time at E3 2019, but after a long enough delay, Hyperkin revised it to include the upgraded sensors. However, even after all that time, the launch date and price are still not finalized. It’s tentatively set for release in the first quarter of 2024 with an estimated MSRP of $49.99, but Terence Calacsan, Public Relations Manager for Hyperkin, tells The Verge, “This is subject to change.”

Besides blue, it will also come in white.
Image: Hyperkin
And black.
Image: Hyperkin

Hall effect sensors use magnets to detect movement, meaning there’s no internal friction or impact between surfaces when you’re turning an analog stick or pressing a trigger. Potentiometer-based modules, like the ones used in all first-party gamepads, from Nintendo Joy-Cons to Sony’s DualSense Edge and Microsoft’s Xbox Elite Series 2, can all fall victim to drift over time.

Related

Hyperkin’s Competitor may sound a bit similar to GameSir’s recent G7 SE, which was the first Xbox-licensed gamepad to use the superior stick technology, but the Competitor aims to separate itself with its unique (for Xbox) stick positioning. We’ll have to see if it competes on price as well. Though if more and more gamepad makers go Hall effect, it will hopefully convince the console makers to eventually follow suit — even if it takes a whole new console generation.

Correction August 23rd, 3:05PM ET: This post originally referred to the new controller as the “Competition.” It is, in fact, called the Hyperkin Competitor. We regret the error.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.