
The new PlayStation 5 controller offers many possibilities such as deactivation of adaptive triggers, voice messages and much more.
Sony Interactive Entertainment has shared all the accessibility options offered by the DualSense, the new PS5 controller and of which we recently offered you an unboxing next to the console. So much so, that some of the controller’s features will be fully customizable; features such as adaptive triggers, which will finally allow you to adjust your resistance level and even disable said functionality completely. But there is more.
Customizable adaptive triggers
And is that Sony has thought that perhaps not everyone wants to take advantage of the level of force of the triggers, either regularly or only at certain times. That is why the resistance of these triggers can be calibrated at different levels and even disconnect any haptic feedback so that the triggers do not offer any resistance.
On the other hand, other options have been included such as voice dictation, a very interesting option for users with vision problems or who simply prefer to write text messages using their voice instead of the touch panel or the crosshair, a very faster and more comfortable, all through the microphone that incorporates the DualSense.
It is also possible to have a text-to-speech function so that users, again, with vision problems, can navigate the console menus more comfortably; thus, a voice will guide the player through the menus to know at all times where they are. Finally, users with hearing problems can count on the assistance of a voice that will read the text they write to the rest of the players.
PS5 arrives in Spain on November 19, 2020. Recently, Ubisoft has detailed which games in its PS4 catalog will not be backward compatible with PS5, including Assassin’s Creed Syndicate.