🎮 Upgrade your Steam Deck OLED with pro-grade precision and zero hassle!
The GuliKit Hall Effect Joystick Module is a direct replacement for Steam Deck OLED joysticks, featuring advanced hall effect sensors to prevent drift and extend lifespan. It installs easily without soldering, retains original touch sensing, and includes one-key calibration for perfect centering. Designed exclusively for Steam Deck OLED, it reduces dead zones for enhanced control and precision.
U**R
Works great on steam deck
Installed these on my steam deck oled. Took like 5 mins. No stick drift and they are in great condition after a few months of use. A little bit slippery compared to the stock ones due to less texture on the thumb sticks.
N**.
An amazing upgrade to the stock joysticks
These look the exact same visually and the textures are the same- but it's somehow...smoother and better feeling in use than the stock joysticks. Plus hall effect- so no more drift issues. The deck should've come with these in the first place.
A**R
Great upgrade
This is a great upgrade for your Steam Deck. It helps with drifting that plagues the original. If you're comfortable opening your device and wiring then buy this. Otherwise I recommend sticking with the stock joysticks.
J**N
Simple install
Very easy to install. Right out the box. Took me 5 mins.
N**A
Easy install. Comfortable usage. Works flawlessly.
Install took me about 15 minutes. While there is no physical feeling difference from my stock thumb sticks, these offer the benefit of not having to worry about "stick drift". I'm keeping the originals not used so that if I ever decide to sell my OLED Steam Deck, I can provide the originals along with the upgraded sticks. They feel comfortable. When buying, be sure to buy the version for your Steam Deck. LCD vs OLED. It matters.
H**4
Cheap, no reason not to.
Installation was quick and easy. Definitely feel better than the stock sticks (not that those felt bad). No issues so far.
A**A
Love the hall effect sticks, needs to be a bit more grippy on thumbs
Ahhh, at least, the magic of hall effect sticks for my OLED Steam Deck.Since Gulikit made their first hall effect controller I have been wanting to try out one of their products. The Wire has a Switch, but I don't play it and she wouldn't understand nor appreciate the difference.I've been waiting, and waiting for them to create modules for the Dualsense Edge controller, which are super simple to swap in, but nothing yet.Then these popped up, at least a chance to really give them a try.Let me say that while I've had stick drift with numerous controllers throughout life (I could be most gamers Dad, so yeah, lots of controllers), I was not experience drift on the Steam Deck.Installation on my model of deck was stupid easy, remove the back panel, then two screws for each stick module, and then reverse the process. Even having never done this, it only took 10 minutes.The feel of the sticks themselves while playing is just slightly different, but most different controllers have their own unique feel. My biggest complaint is that they aren't as grippy on your thumbs while play. I prefer the actual feeling of the stick texture on the original Steam Deck OLED sticks than these, though I prefer the tactile movement on the Gulikit sticks, so it's a bit of a trade off.I was able to reprogram the deadzone on the sticks to be a fair bit smaller than the original steamdeck sticks, so that's good.If your Deck has stick drift, get them, if not, they're certainly not essential, and a bit less grippy, but have a nice movement feel to them.
C**N
EDIT: YOU ROLL THE DICE. NOT WORTH THE MONEY.
The media could not be loaded. Had stick drift and non touch wobble after 3 weeks of steam deck ownership. Swapped them out for these. Can beat the hell out of them and they don’t lose precision or accuracy.Idk how on earth ayaneo uses these sticks.EDIT: Stickdrift within 1 day and both of them are nowhere near 0,0. Watch the video. The left joystick dot in calibration ran out of bounds practically ran a marathon running away after pressing y.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago