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. Alex Richards says:

    My controller, like many others, has irregular response to stick input. I went until beyond the return period for my purchase thinking it was an issue with my wireless card and/or settings. A controller this pricey needs to have a lifetime warranty for at least certain things like manufacturing defects.

  2. Scott Joyner says:

    I’ve bought 3 elite series 2 controllers in the last year and a half. All three have stick drift and I went to Microsoft online chat help with the first controller. Explained the stick drift issue and was provided a case number and told I qualify for a new controller and it would be shipped to me with no charge. 2 days later Microsoft took out 40.00 bucks electronically from my bank. I asked customer support why and was told it was the shipping cost. But hey a brand new elite series 2 controller for40.00 bucks I told my wife it was too good a deal to pass up so I let the charge go through my bank. Two weeks later after 4 different delays I receive from Microsoft that had 2 long magnetic joysticks,4 standard joysticks, one directional pad, and the tool to adjust the joysticks tension. Microsoft said that was what I was supposed to get for 40.00 bucks. I couldn’t return it for a refund and literally all the parts they sent did nothing to correct stick drift but I was told by Microsoft support that if I wasn’t satisfied I had to pay to ship my controller to them, and pay to have them ship it back but because of the backlog of repairs my controller couldn’t be looked at for at least 4 weeks and then I had no guarantee they would even fix it under warranty coverage and would be required to pay 200 dollars incase the work wasn’t covered under warranty coverage. I got ripped off by these jackasses. These elite series 2 controllers are garbage and they know it.

  3. Christina Meng says:

    This happened to my sons controller a week after the warranty was up!

  4. Anthony A Couch says:

    I’ve bought a total of 6 xbox elite controllers and 4 out of 6 have that dreaded drift. Hopefully Xbox can send us something in return.

  5. Jacob Sell Lawrence says:

    Recently got an elite series 2 controller 3 1/2 months ago and the right bumper rarely works anymore, only when I push down on it super hard, I also have three other normal Xbox controllers that have all developed either a stick drift issue or a bumper issue and I am honestly very disappointed in the quality and the craftsmanship of these controllers. Had I know they were made so terrible, I most definitely would have went a different direction with my Gaming system of choice

    1. Alex G says:

      Mine as well as pressing right stick to run…

  6. sabastian abram says:

    I have my elite controller for almost a year and could never use it because of the drift and there was nothing I could do about it, I never tried to take it apart or anything but now that I’ve seen this I’ve come to the fact that the controllers are a waste of money

  7. Daniel Abrams says:

    I’m from Toronto Canada, got my controller just over a year ago and now there is already constant down and left drift on the left analog stick after pretty light use for the year (I use it maybe 6 hrs a week) I never experience drift on my PS3 controller with 6 years of heavy use.

  8. Jonathan Nicholson says:

    I found this class action while looking for people talking about Microsofts purposeful obsolescence. I too have a controller that is way out of zero. No software built into the xbox to change the zero and reduce drift. They obviously want these controllers to be repurchased. Reprehensible behavior. They should get slapped with a forced automatic 5 year warranty and see how well they’ll build them then.

  9. Brian Powell says:

    I have two of the new robot white controllers with this issue and have proof of purchase for both..i constantly have to reboot xbox to help them work

  10. Jamie Bright says:

    Yep my r1 does not work unless I press super hard and sometimes then it still don’t work ..

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