Did not like:
- the body of the gamepad could be a little more (although there really is someone with what hands);
- the triggers are located on the same virtual axis (although this may be normal, it may be the same for the Xbox gamepad);
- some kind of truncated DirectImput mode (no vibration, and the triggers work like one digital button);
- one receiver = one gamepad, no Unifying support (or they would have made some analogue for gaming devices with fewer possible connections, Microsoft could), this somewhat reduces usability, especially if there are two or more gamepads, and they need to be connected to laptop
- racing is not his element, if the game has settings for sensitivity and dead zones, then you can still play somehow, but if they are not there, then the auto reacts a little better to stick deviations than to pressing keys on the keyboard (maybe I'm too I find fault, it's still not a steering wheel);
- it is not always correctly detected by the system, which is why you have to spend some (albeit not a lot) time installing the gamepad manually (in my case, on a stationary computer with win8 pro, everything was installed by itself, it works both in XImput and DirectImput, and here on a laptop with win7 pro for the XImput mode, I had to force firewood from the Xbox, and in the DirectImput mode, the software from Logitech did not find the gamepad, in fact, it is not in the device manager);
- the most important and significant drawback - the connection between the receiver and the gamepad often disappears for 1-5 seconds (when once every 5 minutes, sometimes once per hour), regardless of whether the gamepad is in direct line of sight from the receiver or not, and beyond depending on the distance to the receiver (within reason, of course, it didnât go further than 5m), as it turned out, the connection with the receiver is affected by the presence of any other wireless devices operating at a frequency of 2.4 GHz (whether itâs a wireless keyboard / mouse / second gamepad receiver , Wi-Fi router, or Bluetooth whistle), I had to spread everything in different angles, communication interruptions became less frequent, but did not disappear.