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Saitek X36F Control Stick

Saitek · 1999 · Flight Stick
The best-looking flight stick on the market, but software bugs pull it back to Earth.
3.0
Good
POCG VERDICT
The best-looking flight stick I have ever tested, crippled by unreliable programming software.
The Saitek X36F looks like a fighter cockpit in miniature, but intermittent software bugs and a few comfort quirks keep it from greatness.
About This Hardware

The Saitek X36F is a high-end PC flight stick released in 1999. It stands out immediately for its aggressive, futuristic design, a tall yoke rising from a wide base, topped with a miniature console of buttons, hat switches, and a flip-switch "launch" button that looks like it belongs in an attack spacecraft. Saitek built the X36F around a gameport plus keyboard pass-through connection, requiring a dual gameport and a 5-pin DIN keyboard (PS/2 adapters are supported). The stick uses metal bars for weight and includes suction cups for extra stability. Construction is solid, four long hex screws and multiple Philips screws hold the assembly together, and some internal wiring is reinforced with hot glue. The yoke tension is notably heavy, delivered by two surprisingly small springs through a pincer linkage. Trim controls are tied directly to the main potentiometers. The unit ships with a 3.5-inch floppy disk for the Windows-only programming software; no bundled games or applications are included. System requirements are modest: a 486-66 or better, Windows 3.1 or 95, and a serial mouse port is optional for use with the companion throttle. The X36F carries a one-year limited warranty.

Specifications
InterfaceGameport + Keyboard Pass-through
Buttons3 top buttons + trigger + pinkie slide + launch flip + c button
Hat Switches2 × 8-position
Base Dimensions6.75 × 6.75 in
Yoke Height10 in
TensionHeavy (dual spring, pincer linkage)
WeightMetal bars, suction cups included
Software3.5" floppy, Windows 3.1/95 only
System Requirements486-66, dual gameport, 5-pin DIN keyboard (PS/2 adapter ok)
Warranty1 year limited
Hardware Info
ManufacturerSaitek
CategoryFlight Stick
Released1999
ReviewedJune 14, 2026
How to Get One Today
Notes & Warnings
Check for opened boxes, the software comes on floppy, so scan for viruses if the seal is broken. You'll need a PS/2 adapter if your keyboard uses mini-DIN. The uninstall process is manual; keep that in mind if you test the software.
Editor's Note
This review was restored from the POCG archive and rewritten in the Maniac voice. Original score: 6/10, converted to 3.0/5.