Steven Cohen  |  April 30, 2020

Category: Legal News

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Xbox controller

A class action lawsuit has been filed against Microsoft by a consumer who claims the wireless Microsoft-brand Xbox One controllers are defective.

Plaintiff Donald McFadden says that the potentiometer within the controller contains a design flaw where the joystick registers “phantom input” or “stick drift,” which thwarts accurate gameplay.

The Xbox controller class action lawsuitstates that Microsoft markets and manufactures these controllers as superior devices without disclosing that there is a joystick defect that interferes with proper game functioning.

He says that gamers who purchased these controllers paid more than what the product was worth and more than they would pay if they were without defects.

McFadden lives in New York and claims to be an avid gamer, owning multiple Microsoft gaming products, including special edition versions of the standard controller, as well as the Elite controller.

The plaintiff says that after learning about the Elite controller, he purchased one at a GameStop. He claims that he has always been careful with the Elite controller, placing it back on the charger when he was finished with it, and once a week wiping it with a cloth after playing to remove his fingerprints from the matte finish.

McFadden claims that he started to notice that the joystick on the controller started to drift, causing movement without his input. He says that the interference was so great that he purchased another Elite controller for a cost of $160.

The second controller started having the same problems as the first one, he states, and he spent a considerable amount of time attempting to fix the defect on his own. He says that this was unsuccessful and even ordered a repair kit off of Amazon to help him manually fix his first controller.

McFadden maintains that he would not have purchased the Elite controllers if he had known about the defect. Instead, he states that he would have purchased a less expensive controller that would have allowed him to play his games without the defects impeding his ability to enjoy his games.

He alleges if Microsoft would fix the defects in the Elite controllers, he would purchase another one.

The Xbox class action lawsuit asserts that the defendant has been made aware of the defect via online consumer complaints beginning as early as 2014.

In addition, the plaintiff states that Microsoft has also been aware of the defect due to its own records of complaints and warranty requests.

Even though Microsoft allegedly had knowledge of the defects within the controllers, the Xbox class action lawsuit complains that the defendant refuses to repair the controllers without charge. McFadden states that the warranty on the controllers is just 90 days.

“As a result of Defendant’s unfair, deceptive, and/or fraudulent business practices, owners of wireless, Microsoft-brand Xbox One controllers, including Plaintiff, have suffered an ascertainable loss,” the Microsoft Xbox class action lawsuit proclaims.

McFadden says that as a result of the defendant’s deceptive conduct, the plaintiff and putative Class Members have paid more for the Xbox controllers than what they are worth and more than what they would have had Microsoft disclosed the defect.

The plaintiff states that a simple Google search about the stick drift defect reveals multiple forum and message board posts from consumers complaining about the defect. In addition, McFadden mentions numerous YouTube videos of users who attempted to fix the defect on their own.

Gamers have also posted numerous complaints about the defect in Microsoft’s own forums, which indicate that the defendant has been aware of the stick drift for many years, the Xbox class action lawsuit maintains.

Common questions of law and fact in this class action lawsuit include: 1) whether the Xbox controllers are defective; 2) whether the defect is material to a reasonable consumer; 3) whether the defendant had knowledge of the defect; and 4) whether the defendant has violated consumer protection statutes.

“Defendant engaged in materially misleading acts and practices by marketing and representing their wireless Xbox controllers were functional, superior products that enhanced gameplay while failing to disclose a significant defect causes stick drift,” the Xbox class action lawsuit goes on to say.

McFadden states that video gamers are concerned about the functionality of their controllers as video games cannot be played without them. The defendant’s failure to disclose the defect within the controllers caused substantial injury to consumers.

“To market and price a controller as a superior, platform-enhancing product while concealing the joystick contains a defect that interferes with gameplay is unethical and unscrupulous,” says the Xbox class action lawsuit.

Prospective Class Members include: “All persons in the United States who bought any model of a wireless, Microsoft brand, Xbox One controller.”

Do you own an Xbox controller that is defective? Leave a message in the comments section below.

The plaintiff is represented by Cynthia Heidelberg of Breskin Johnson & Townsend PLLC and Nicholas A. Migliaccio and Jason S. Rathod of Migliaccio & Rathod LLP.

The Xbox Controller Defect Class Action Lawsuit is Donald McFadden v. Microsoft Corp., Case No. 2:20-cv-00640, in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington.

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1,082 thoughts onXbox One Class Action Alleges Controller Defect

  1. Jared says:

    I’ve owned 3 Xbox controllers, 2 being elite V1 controllers costing ~$160 each. Every controller started drifting 3-4 months in, almost as soon as the warranty ran out.

  2. Alex says:

    I personally have owned 3 elite controllers. Two 1st gen models and one 2nd gen, all of which have had major stick drift. Also, every single one of my friends that have purchased the elite controllers have all had stick drift issues.

  3. Brandon Ruiz says:

    Bought a Xbox elite sereis 2 and started to drift after a month pasted

  4. Alex says:

    I got my Xbox one controller that came with the console and a few months after playing I started to notice that there was stick drift, especially when playing games like rainbow six siege and apex legends. It sucks and I don’t want to pay for a fix just for it to break later, so it just seemed like something to deal with. I’m glad someone is finally trying to do something about this.

    1. Jeri Covington says:

      Add me to this class action lawsuit. My sons both have owned defective controllers for xBox One

  5. John Chambers says:

    I bought one years ago, never ago. Absolutely abhorrent stick drift inside six months, with minimal use because I’ve been in college. Yet it still managed to wear out, a call to Microsoft later, I’d been told all they could do for me was let me buy a new one. Not even the option to have it repaired at a charge.

  6. Jordan says:

    Had a controller that came with the system that started drifting about two years after purchase. I bought a second one and it started drifting out of the box. Now have a third that tree thankfully hasn’t drifted but I am out 60 dollars for the one that drifted out of the box. Also it sucks having two basically worthless controllers.

  7. Danielle J Carter says:

    I have purchased 4 Xbox controllers in the past 2 years that have had this issue. The first did not happen immediately. But, the second one is already phantom drifting. I am out of ~$200.

  8. Emily says:

    I have purchased 2 Xbox controllers in the past 12 months that have had this issue. The first did not present issues for 3-4 months. However, the second was purchased just last week, and is already phantom drifting. I did not purchase the protection plan for either controller, so I am out the $120 I wasted on these.

  9. kate says:

    I have purchased 2 to 4 in the last 6 years

  10. Samuel Mailhot says:

    I have purchased 4- 6 Xbox One controllers in the past 3-4 years and have gotten protection plans on them. Yet I persistently had to replace them due to day one stick drift or stick drift that came on about a month in. This made for serious issues with my high accuracy gaming and was depressingly annoying to deal with. I want compensayion for those controllers, my stress and my time taken away by it.
    I also ran into audio failures on some of them.

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