If you want to test your own device for sensor support use Sensor Kinetics app from the store and look for the Gyroscope output. It's surprisingly hard to find reliable data of that sort of thing and it's only from 2012, you could guess ~$400+ phones always have it but it's never certain.Īlmost all phones and tablets provide rotation data but a real gyroscope makes it high-response and very stable, especially on fast turns. Certain buggy devices without a real gyroscope may need to go below "Fastest".Ĭ) The ability to choose between raw gyroscope + accelerometer sensor data or the potentially less accurate derived rotation (leave it to "Best" in most cases)Ī) Restart the app server or the application that uses it if you change orientation in the app so it aligns well to the new orientationī) Even on a cheap phone without a true gyroscope it works relatively well for Shrines: But if you want the highest accuracy and lowest latency you will need a phone or tablet with a true gyroscope apart from only an accelerometer and magnetometer, and ideally a stable connection.Ĭ) If you have a magnetometer instead of a gyroscope (low or mid-end devices) 1) avoid approaching other electronics to lower trembling + distortions 2) avoid doing very sudden movements 3) Prefer using it on BotW Shrines and other low-demand usage, it's not ideal for snap camera movements.Ī relatively reliable list of devices with true gyroscopes for high-response Cemuhook motion support: Certain old or non-compliant devices may be supported better on later versionsĪ) Optional Inverted Axes and Landscape/Orientation modesī) The ability to set sampling rate to "Game" or lower. Thank you Rajkosto! Please show your support to him either with donations, promotion or constructive feedback.
Ignore the main body of a thread I made yesterday about Android motion control, this is the real deal. The better your device at sensors and the lower the latency of your network the better the results. if it has only an accelerometer without even a magnetometer, the yaw axis will be missing entirely. If your device does not have a gyroscope but it does have at least an accelerometer and a magnetometer (common on mid-end phones), it uses the derived rotation data provided by the OS API.
More accurately, it now supports motion control via raw gyroscope and accelerometer data on Android phones and tablets.
Scroll to Android section: (Instructions, Details, Official Page) Main Cemuhook: (required) Third-party app that shows what kind of sensors you have: