
Once here click the load profile buttonĪnd load the gc profile you downloaded earlier. Now close this window and head to options again then configure the controller. The list and change your controller input plugin to what should appear as "N-Rage's Direct-Input8 V2 1.80a".ħ. From here click the plugins submenu at the bottom of Boot up pj64 1.7 and go to the options tab then hit settings. If you check in device management, on windows, under human interface devices there should be 4 HID-compliant game controllers,Ħ. Plug in the controller to the Mayflash (port 1) then the mayflash into the USB, only the black cable is required asĥ. Place the controller mapping somewhere safe, I recommend somewhere inside the pj64 folder or just create a folder somewhereģ. Should be (PJ641.7 folder)/plugin/inputĢ. Get the Nrage plugin and place it into the pj64 input plugin directory. This controller layout (closest match to n64 I could find): ġ. Mayflash PC USB Adapter (should look like this one: ) If I can find out how the Z-Axis is supposed to register then I might be able to fix the problem.RAW Paste Data GC CONTROLLER ON PJ64 1.7 (WINDOWS 10 + MAYFLASH GC TO USB) UPDATE: I don't have a way of truly knowing if the issue is JoyToKey or just Windows, but in the Windows USB controller setup, the C-Stick corresponds to the Z-Axis, and it seems to be working okay. What can I do to fix this? If you need any more details or examples, I will post them, just let me know what you need.

I have tried calibrating the controls via the Windows USB Game Controller setup, but it does not work (using Windows 8 64-bit by the way).

In other words, if I push the C-Stick up-left, up, up-right, or right, JoyToKey registers the input, even though I set it to only register when I push the C-Stick left. If I program a key, say the letter "U" for example, to Left on the C-Stick, it seems to register all along the top of the C-Stick, but not the left. JoyToKey works perfectly with the controller, but the only command that does not function properly is the C-Stick. I noticed that programs on my computer weren't really recognizing my controller that was hooked in, so I got a free program called "JoyToKey" that accepts inputs from a controller and sets the input to a certain key on the keyboard. I plugged the GC controller into Port 1 on the Mayflash adapter (it's a dual-port) and plugged the adapter into the USB on my computer. I got a Mayflash "GC Controller Adapter for PC USB".
