
There’s a particular kind of joy in discovering that premium gaming technology has finally trickled down to budget hardware. The EasySMX D10 embodies this perfectly — a controller that costs around $40 on sale yet packs features you’d expect from pads costing twice as much. It’s not perfect, but what you get for the money borders on absurd.
TMR Technology at Budget Prices
The headline feature here is TMR — tunnel magnetoresistance — technology in the thumbsticks. If you haven’t heard of TMR, think of it as Hall effect’s more efficient cousin. It uses magnetic sensors for precise control input, offers even better power efficiency, and most importantly, effectively eliminates stick drift. This is technology that’s only recently started appearing in high-end keyboards, and here it is in a sub-$50 controller.
Combined with linear Hall effect triggers and a 1,000 Hz polling rate via the 2.4 GHz wireless connection, the D10 delivers responsiveness that punches well above its weight class. The included charging dock doubles as the wireless receiver, giving your controller a permanent home while keeping your desk tidy.
Where Budget Meets Reality
Let’s be honest about what you’re getting. The D10 feels like a budget controller because it is one. The build quality, while solid, doesn’t match an Xbox Series controller or the 8BitDo Pro 3. It’s comfortable and well-balanced, but you’ll notice you’re not holding premium hardware.
The D-pad deserves specific mention. It’s a connected design rather than four separate buttons, which produces satisfying clicks but makes diagonal inputs awkward. Platformer and fighting game enthusiasts should look elsewhere. The triggers, while technically excellent with their Hall effect sensors, lack the tactile feedback some players prefer.
There’s also no companion software. Everything must be configured through button shortcuts learned from the manual. For Switch gaming this works fine, but PC players accustomed to extensive customization options might feel limited.
Performance Where It Counts
In actual gameplay, the D10 impresses. Rocket League sessions with constant trigger pressure and complex stick movements felt precise and responsive. The reprogrammable back paddles, while not something everyone will use, add flexibility without impacting the controller’s core ergonomics.
The trigger can be switched between long-press analog mode and hair-trigger microswitch mode via a physical switch on the back — a feature once reserved for pro controllers. Racing games get full analog precision while shooters get instant actuation.
The Verdict
At its frequent sale price around $40, the EasySMX D10 is nearly impossible to argue against. TMR sticks that won’t drift, Hall effect triggers, a charging dock, back paddles, and multi-platform compatibility create a value proposition that makes premium controllers look overpriced.
At the full $60 MSRP, the calculus changes. Competitors like the GameSir G7 Pro become attractive alternatives. But catch the D10 on sale, and you’re getting technology that has no business being this affordable.