However, for most modern games and standard Xbox One/PS5 controllers, the Alpha version is overkill. Stick to the (v4.18 or newer) for general use—unless you specifically need the alpha’s hot-plugging or force feedback profiles.
| Problem | Likely Cause | Solution | |---------|--------------|----------| | Game crashes on launch | Conflicting DLLs from other mods (e.g., ReShade, ENB). | Rename your original xinput1_3.dll to xinput1_4.dll (the game may fallback). Or remove other DLL wrappers. | | Controller not recognized | USB power saving or driver issue. | Go to Windows → Universal Serial Bus controllers → Disable “Allow the computer to turn off this device.” | | Buttons mapped incorrectly after restart | The x360ce.ini file is not in the game folder. | Ensure both .dll and .ini are present. Re-save the config. | | Vibration works in config but not in game | Game uses XInput version 1.4 or 9.1. | Copy xinput9_1_0.dll and xinput1_4.dll (renamed from the original) to the game folder. | | Alpha crashes on opening | Missing .NET runtime or corrupted settings cache. | Delete x360ce.ini and let the tool recreate it. Install .NET 4.7.2. | X360ce 4.10.0.0 Alpha Download
A single application manages both 32-bit and 64-bit games, simplifying the user experience compared to the older version 3.x. However, for most modern games and standard Xbox