

I've exhausted my resources and was hoping for some assistance, but I'm starting to think that their may not be a solution to this currently. I have also come across people referring to VirtualHere that you can purchase on steam but the reviews leave me a bit skeptical it will solve my problem. I've set the shortcut exe properties to make sure the file runs as admin although i don't know if that would have any change.

Turning these settings on enables me to establish the controller as a 'Gamepad' config under the Controller Configuration. I have tried adjusting my Controller Settings with the PS4 Configuration Support on & off, including the Generic Gamepad Configuration Support as well, but this didn't seem to make any difference I managed to get around this and it displays properly but I cannot get any input from my DS4, only the host PC works via either m/kb or plugging my DS4 into it. To start, when I launched Witcher 3 I had only a black screen. I've added the game as a non-steam game, but in Big Picture Mode it shows that the game has no controller support in the bottom right corner, just a keyboard is displayed.Īll the games that I've purchased through steam that display a controller here I can launch and have no issues playing with my DS4. I recently purchased a Steam Link and was trying to use it to play Witcher 3 that I purchased on GoG sometime ago. I'd definitely play a sequel.Hello, I have been searching for a while now and am unable to find a solution to my problem. I'd like to point out, though, how awesome the NPCs were (except the first 2, who were cliches), some of my favorite ever. The combat was extremely easy up until near the end, then became extremely hard. It would have been better to not include a morality system at all, and this stuck out to me as the worst part of the game. Furthermore, all moral choices were almost totally negated by a choice right before the end which pushes you 75% in either direction. Even the Sith choices in Knights of the Old Republic 1 were more nuanced and had actual reasons behind being evil. They spend the first hour of the game telling you how the "evil" path wasn't truly evil, then every single moral choice in the game after the first was either purely good or sadistically evil (for example, killing the people you just completed a quest for, for no reason). The morality system of the game was similar to Knights of the Old Republic, but IMO was very poorly done, probably the worst morality system in any game I've played. I remember thinking, "is this it?" I finished it in less than 20 hours. I thought it was good, with fun combat and some great characters, but it had a few flaws.
