X360ce 41000 Alpha Exclusive › (Reliable)
We tested the x360ce 41000 alpha exclusive against the stable x360ce v4.4 on three games: Cyberpunk 2077, Forza Horizon 5, and Street Fighter 6, using a generic USB controller.
| Metric | Stable v4.4 | 4.10.0.0 Alpha Exclusive | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Average Input Lag | 12ms | 4ms | | CPU Overhead | 2-3% | 0.5-1% | | Force Feedback Accuracy | 85% (generic) | 99% (preset matched) | | Game Compatibility (Steam) | 91% | 98% (exclusive hook fixes UWP games) | | Crash Rate (per 10 hours) | 1 crash | 0 crashes (but driver setup required) | | Setup Complexity | Low | Medium (requires Test Mode) | x360ce 41000 alpha exclusive
Conclusion: The alpha exclusive is significantly faster but demands more technical know-how. We tested the x360ce 41000 alpha exclusive against
Sign in with a temporary anonymous ID, and your button mappings are saved to a cloud cache. This is exclusive to the alpha branch and allows hot-swapping profiles mid-game. Sign in with a temporary anonymous ID, and
If the 41000 alpha exclusive gives you too much trouble, use these instead:
Warning: The alpha build is not on the official x360ce.com front page. You must navigate to the "Experimental Builds" section or the official GitHub repository’s "Actions" tab. Look for the artifact labeled x360ce_4.10.0.0_alpha_exclusive.zip. Always verify the SHA-256 checksum to avoid malware.