Scuf Omega is now available worldwide as a new officially licensed performance controller for PlayStation 5 consoles, with PC, Mac, iOS and Android compatibility also included.
The controller is priced at $219.99 in the US, €239.99 in Europe, £209.99 in the UK and 37,980 JPY in Japan, though Sony says pricing and availability can vary by region. The announcement on the PlayStation Blog positions Omega as a premium option for players who want more remappable inputs than a standard DualSense controller offers.
Extra inputs are the main hook
Omega has 28 total inputs, including 11 customizable extras. That count covers four rear paddles, two side buttons and five G-Keys, giving competitive players more places to assign actions without moving their thumbs from the sticks.
The controller can be remapped directly on the hardware, while the Scuf Mobile App on iOS and Android opens up deeper profile management. Through the app, players can save multiple layouts to the controller, adjust sensitivity and trigger response curves, recalibrate thumbsticks, configure SOCD settings for fighting games and manage audio controls.
Scuf's own Omega product page also lists a 1K polling rate for PC play, along with the same rear paddles, G-Keys, side buttons and mobile app support highlighted in Sony's announcement.
Mechanical switches and magnetic thumbsticks
Scuf Omega uses Omron mechanical switches for its Instant Triggers, D-Pad and face buttons. The triggers can be switched between a fast click mode for shooters and a full analog range for games that need finer control, such as racing games.
The controller also uses Endurance TMR Thumbsticks, which rely on non-contact magnetic sensing. Players can choose concave or domed sticks in short or tall heights, then recalibrate them through the mobile app.
Scuf has removed vibration modules from Omega to reduce weight, a trade-off aimed at competitive players who care more about a lighter controller and steady aim than DualSense-style feedback. That makes the new pad a specialized PS5 option, not a straight replacement for Sony's own controller.
