Hall effect sticks
Gamepad Machenike G6 Pro
User rating

Machenike G6 Pro

Top contributors
Kenny ZweibohmerN. de Oliveira C.EythavonJohn Punchc xk
Test Status:Not verified yet!
Compatible: AndroidiOSLinuxSwitchWindows
Interfaces: Cable
Price: $59.99, find on: Aliexpress

Machenike G6 Pro Input lag comparison

#ConnectionMode
LatencyAverage (ms)
Polling RateMedian (Hz)
Jitter
OSBuild ver.
FWTester ver.
Button Latency GPDL
1
CableXInput
🔘5.24
10001.47
Win 11
10.0.22631
---
3.0.92
Eythavon
🔘
Button LatencyGPDL
✓ Selected
2.49 ms
5.24 ms
8.45 ms
1.47 ms
1000 Hz
#3006 • 2024-10-31
GPDL v3.0.92
Win 11 Build 10.0.22631
Eythavon
Cable • XInput
More information

Latency

Our visualization focuses on Average Latency, presented as vertical bars to make comparing performance across different connection modes (Wired, Bluetooth, Dongle) instant and intuitive.

The chart differentiates between:

  • Button Latency: How quickly the game registers a physical button press.
  • Stick Latency: The delay in registering joystick movement (tested at 99% deflection).

Visualizing Stability (Jitter)

You may notice that the top portion of some bars is semi-transparent or "faded". This represents Jitter (instability):

  • Solid Bar: Represents the stable, consistent average latency.
  • Faded Top: Indicates the variance. A larger transparent area means higher jitter, implying the controller's response time fluctuates. A solid bar with little to no fading indicates a highly stable connection.

Deep Dive: Click the arrow to reveal Probability Distribution Charts. These show the exact breakdown of every input tested, displaying Probability (%) on the Y-axis and Latency (ms) on the X-axis.

Polling Rate vs. Latency

It is crucial to understand that Polling Rate and Latency are measured using two entirely different methodologies on our site:

  • Latency (ms) is measured by the Prometheus 82 hardware. It captures the physical movement of the stick or button via hardware interrupts with microsecond precision. This is the "real-world" delay.
  • Polling Rate (Hz) is measured via a Software Tool. It shows how often the OS receives reports from the USB stack.

Common Myth: A higher polling rate (like 8000 Hz) does not automatically guarantee lower latency if the controller's internal processing is slow. Conversely, a high polling rate on a chart might show fluctuations (e.g., 7800Hz instead of 8000Hz) due to OS jitter or CPU scheduling, which does not necessarily impact the hardware latency measured by the P82.

To test your own gamepad's polling rate, you can use our tool: Download Polling Rate Tester.

Testing Methods

Gamepadla ensures data integrity by combining three distinct testing methodologies:

  1. Prometheus 82 (P82): Our gold standard. A custom-built hardware device that physically actuates buttons and sticks. It uses high-speed hardware interrupts to capture events, making it independent of the controller's polling rate. It provides an error margin of only ±1ms for buttons and sticks. View on GitHub.

  2. GPDL Tester: An electrical monitoring tool for highly accurate button latency. While P82 simulates human-like mechanical movement, GPDL focuses on the electrical signal speed. View on GitHub.

  3. Software Polling Test: A pure software diagnostic to check communication frequency. We use this to verify if a controller actually reaches its advertised specs (e.g., 1000Hz or 8000Hz) at the OS level. Download Software.

Note: By comparing hardware-level latency (P82) with software-level reports (Polling Test), we can identify if a controller has "fake" high polling rates or poorly optimized firmware.

Stick test of Machenike G6 Pro

Stick Movement Linearity Test

Reviews of Machenike G6 Pro

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Machenike G6 Pro specifications

Internal

Battery life hours
8
D-pad buttons type
Mechanical
Main buttons type
Mechanical
Sticks type
Hall

External

Audio port
No
Button layout
Xbox
Display
No
Joystick positioning
Asymmetric
Paddles
2
Rubber handles
No
Shoulder buttons
No
Stick tension
No
Trigger lock
Yes

Features

Gyroscope function
Yes
NFC support
No
Switch Wake Up
Yes
Trigger vibration
Yes
Triggers pressing
Analog

Connection

Charging dock
No
USB interface
Type-C

Software

Firmware support
Yes
Macros option
Yes
Mobile software
Yes
No Dead Zone
Yes
PC software
No

Platforms

Android
Yes
iOS
Yes
Linux
Yes
macOS
Yes
Nintendo Switch
Yes
Playstation 3
No
Playstation 5
No
Playstaton 4
No
Windows
Yes
Xbox One
No
Xbox Series
No
Results based on answers from 5 users. Specifications are verified by moderators and reflect actual device behavior. Found a mistake? Hover over the specification to report it.
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LatScore Comparison of Machenike G6 Pro

Users' opinion

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The compatibility with linux is very poor
1 votes
terrible stick rebound making the whole controller shake noticeably, and the latency is pretty bad
2 votes

User comments

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243 days ago

The rumble of the controller is very intense, for games like Hollow Night, I had to disable it because it made the experience less immersive. As for the latency, I didn't had any problems with it. But the linux support is horrible, using the dongle the controller does not rumble at all, and using a cable it did rumble, but does not stop until i pressed RT or LT. As for the sticks, DO NOT USE the lighter ones included in the box, they might need less force to move, but the rebound in them are HORRIBLE, in Dead Cells, I couldn't let go of the stick after facing one direction as my character would face the other one immediately (I got hit A LOT because of that...) I liked this controller, very tech-ish and overall good specs, but the materials, the linux compatibility and the stick rebound made impossible for me to use as a daily driver

2