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Home » Sony’s wild PlayStation controller patent gives you buttons anywhere you want
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Sony’s wild PlayStation controller patent gives you buttons anywhere you want

By technologistmag.com2 February 20262 Mins Read
Sony’s wild PlayStation controller patent gives you buttons anywhere you want
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Sony’s wild PlayStation controller patent gives you buttons anywhere you want

Sony has a new patent that imagines a PlayStation controller built around on-screen buttons you can rearrange. The concept swaps most fixed top-face inputs for a large touchscreen surface.

Instead of living with one D-pad and one face-button cluster, you’d place touch zones where your thumbs actually land. You could also resize them, or turn some off when a game doesn’t need every input.

The description ties that flexibility to comfort and accessibility, including an option to invert the arrangement and move a D-pad to the right side. There’s no product name, release window, price, or platform detail attached to it. Still, it shows Sony is exploring radically adjustable layouts beyond today’s standard pad.

Buttons that can scale down

The big promise is adaptability from game to game. The touchscreen surface can show a full control set, or slim it down when you only need a handful of inputs. Think of the DualSense trackpad, but for the left and right panels instead of buttons.

That matters because different genres stress different parts of your hands. A driving game could favor larger stick zones, while a simple puzzler could run with fewer, bigger touch targets. Big targets help.

Touch input that reads intent

Touch controllers live or die on accuracy, and the patent tries to address that head-on. It describes gesture support, including taps, swipes, presses, pinches, and joystick-like movement across the surface.

It also calls out optical sensors under the surface and the ability to detect a finger approaching before it lands, so input can be interpreted more deliberately. Lighting can mark reference points, helping you see where active zones sit. It has to feel intentional.

What would prove it works

The hardest part is feel. A touchscreen can be endlessly configurable, but it can also weaken muscle memory and tactile certainty compared with real buttons and sticks.

Patents aren’t products. If this ever shows up as hardware, the most telling detail will be whether it keeps physical anchors like triggers and grips while letting the touchscreen handle the variable top-face layout. Until then, it’s best read as a signal of where Sony wants control customization and accessibility options to go next.

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