I had this problem with fedora base system is due to the bluetooth software with controllers like PS5 they use, if I remember I never got it to work right, I am sure there is a fix somewhere but I have not found.
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Which version of Bazzite are you on? Bluetooth has been having connectivity problems in the latest versions (a regression from the Bluez driver upstream, I believe).
I rebased my Steam Deck to 39-20240328
, and everything seems to be working as expected. 39-20240414
might also be okay, but I haven't tested it myself.
ETA: I haven't been able to connect my primary BT headphones to my Deck, but my Steam Controller and a different pair of BT headphones are fine. Might be a similar case with you; I don't know why one works but the other doesn't.
Is your Bluetooth adapter in a USB 3.0 port? That can interfere with the signal. Move it to a non 3.0 port, preferably on a front panel port to limit interference from the motherboard. An extension cable can even be helpful (this solved much of my BT connection issues personally).
It's connected via PCIe on the motherboard :>
Ah. It might be the orientation of the machine. I assume the antenna is on the back. See if getting a clearer view of the antenna to the reciprocating device helps.
Are there any physical obstructions between the controller and the antenna? That'd reduce the effective range.
I have had a bunch of problems with PS5 controllers recently.
I am noy sure you are experiencing drop outs due to physical limitations, rather due to (as I recall) recent restructuring of the kernel code handling connections to the controller and regressions introduced herein.
One way to rule out physical limitations, would be to stand next to the PC and see how it fares. What is your experience like then?
Works completely fine when I sit next to the computer and play on my monitor instead of the TV. It only occurs when I sit away from the PC, by 3 meters, roughly. I also have a Bluetooth headset I use from time to time, and that works flawlessly connected to the PC, even if I go to other rooms in the house. So pretty sure the network card itself works fineโฆ
The Shield was made for game streaming which would precisely enable you to connect the controllers to it and run the games on your PC. Nvidia has since stopped supporting that software but luckily there are alternatives. The Moonlight client and Sunshine host are direct implementations of what Nvidia used to provide or there's Steam Link if you're using Steam.
I know the DS4 controllers had similar connectivity issues on Windows which could be solved by changing power management settings. I'm not sure if this issue still applies to using DualSense on Linux.