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Turn your phone into a free multitouch wireless gamepad for computer gaming with minimal ads

Turn your phone into a free multitouch wireless gamepad for computer gaming with minimal ads

Vote (1 votes)

Program license Free

Developer NEGU Soft

Version 0.10.0

Works under Android

Vote

(1 votes)

Developer

NEGU Soft

Works under

Android

Program license

Free

Version

0.10.0

Pros

  • Turns your phone into a multitouch gamepad for PC, Mac, and Linux
  • Real button emulation lets you press multiple buttons with one thumb
  • Connects over Wi‑Fi or Bluetooth using a small, free receiver program
  • Simple interface with enough guidance for new users
  • Does not overload the experience with ads

Cons

  • Face buttons (especially A and B) can miss taps even when pressed inside the circle
  • Lacks detailed calibration and resizing options for fine-tuning the controls
  • Visual design feels dated and could benefit from a modern refresh

Ultimate Gamepad turns your Android phone into a multitouch game controller for your computer, using Wi‑Fi or Bluetooth to send real button inputs. With a focus on button emulation and thumb-friendly controls, it aims to mimic a traditional gamepad without extra hardware.

This app is best suited to people who play games on a PC, Mac, or Linux machine and want a simple, low-cost way to control them using a phone, as long as they are comfortable running a small companion program on their computer and can live with a few interface quirks.

Wireless Gamepad Concept and Core Features

At its core, Ultimate Gamepad replaces a physical controller with your smartphone screen. After you set up the companion Ultimate Control Receiver on your computer, your phone connects over Wi‑Fi or Bluetooth and starts sending gamepad-style inputs.

The app focuses on real button emulation, so the computer interprets your taps as if they came from a regular controller. The layout is designed so you can press several virtual buttons with a single thumb, which is useful for action-heavy games where you often hit multiple inputs at once.

Because the receiver program works on PC, Mac, and Linux, the concept fits a variety of setups, from laptops to desktops running different operating systems.

Touch Controls and Responsiveness

The multitouch implementation lets you press multiple buttons at the same time, and in general the controls respond quickly. However, the accuracy of taps is not perfect across the entire layout.

In particular, the main face buttons can feel inconsistent. Even when your finger rests clearly inside the on-screen circle for the A or B button, the press may not always register. Touches that land directly on the letter inside the circle are more reliable, which suggests the active area does not always match what the graphic implies.

The app offers an option to expand the activation zones, which helps somewhat, but there are no deeper calibration tools or fine-grained resizing options. Players who rely on very precise or rapid button presses may notice occasional missed inputs, especially in fast games where every tap counts.

Interface Design and Ease of Use

Ultimate Gamepad keeps its interface fairly straightforward. The main controls are easy to understand, and the app provides enough guidance so that new users are not left guessing about what to do.

On the plus side, it does not bombard you with advertising, which makes it more pleasant to keep open during long play sessions. The general layout does its job, but visually it looks dated. A refreshed design with cleaner graphics and more modern styling would make the app feel more polished and easier on the eyes.

Overall usability is solid once you grasp the basic flow. You pick your computer from a list, start the connection, and the phone transforms into a virtual controller without too much fuss.

Companion Receiver and Platform Support

Ultimate Gamepad depends on the separate Ultimate Control Receiver program that runs on your computer. This small, free utility is required so the phone can communicate over Wi‑Fi or Bluetooth and so the computer can recognize the virtual gamepad.

The receiver supports PC, Mac, and Linux, which broadens the audience beyond just Windows users. Once the receiver is active, it appears inside the app and you can connect to it, at which point the phone behaves like a gamepad from the computer’s perspective.

This design keeps the Android app itself focused on being a controller, while the desktop utility handles the translation into game inputs.

Who Will Appreciate Ultimate Gamepad

Ultimate Gamepad works well for players who:

- Want to use their phone as a multitouch joystick for computer games.

- Prefer a free, software-based alternative to buying a separate controller.

- Value a relatively light advertising footprint and straightforward setup.

It is less ideal for those who demand flawless button accuracy, or who expect extensive customization of control size and layout. The app does a good job delivering a functional wireless gamepad, but its touch calibration and dated visuals leave room for improvement.

Pros

  • Turns your phone into a multitouch gamepad for PC, Mac, and Linux
  • Real button emulation lets you press multiple buttons with one thumb
  • Connects over Wi‑Fi or Bluetooth using a small, free receiver program
  • Simple interface with enough guidance for new users
  • Does not overload the experience with ads

Cons

  • Face buttons (especially A and B) can miss taps even when pressed inside the circle
  • Lacks detailed calibration and resizing options for fine-tuning the controls
  • Visual design feels dated and could benefit from a modern refresh

Screenshots of Ultimate Gamepad