Video and photo editing has always been demanding on keyboard shortcuts. The typical workflow splits attention between tools, timelines, and modifier keys, with the left hand constantly crossing the keyboard while the right stays on the mouse. Professionals spending long hours in DaVinci Resolve or Premiere Pro know the frustration well, and a more deliberate way to manage those commands has long been missing.
XPPen’s Pilot Pro is the brand’s first dedicated editing console, and it makes a confident debut. It packs 16 customizable buttons, three dials, and an all-way joystick into a compact controller built for one-handed, eyes-free operation. The premise is straightforward: let the left hand manage the shortcuts so the right stays on the mouse and your eyes stay on the screen.
Designer: XPPen
The console’s layout borrows from game controllers but reads more like a precision instrument. An 8-way joystick at the center handles footage scrubbing, color wheel navigation, and clip selection depending on the software. Two rotary dials surround the joystick at different heights, and a third sits just in front. All three deliver haptic feedback through a linear motor that can be tuned or disabled.
What makes the eyes-free claim convincing is the sculpted 3D key layout. Every button and dial has a distinct shape and position, so your fingers learn the device without looking away from the screen. XPPen also added a hypothenar support beneath the controller to keep the outer edge of the palm anchored. That ergonomic attention earned the Pilot Pro a Good Design Award 2025.
The haptic motor makes each interaction feel intentional rather than accidental, which matters more than it sounds when you’re deep in a cut. Up to seven customizable themes let you organize shortcuts your way, and profiles can be shared within the community. XPPen also offers presets from professional editors, so jumping into new software doesn’t require rebuilding your control scheme from scratch.
Tasks like scrubbing through a long timeline, grading a batch of shots, or retouching a portrait session become much less disruptive to the flow. The joystick handles navigation without lifting the hand, the dials adjust values with fine precision, and the 16 buttons absorb the commands that would otherwise mean a trip across the keyboard. It’s a setup that rewards muscle memory fairly quickly.
For connectivity, the Pilot Pro supports wired USB-C, Dual-Channel Bluetooth 5.4 Low Energy, and a USB dongle for machines without Bluetooth. The built-in 1,900 mAh battery lasts over 15 days at four hours of daily use. It works with Windows 10 and macOS 11 or later, and is compatible with Premiere Pro, DaVinci Resolve, Photoshop, Lightroom Classic, and Final Cut Pro.
Weighing 251g with dimensions of roughly 130mm x 93mm, the Pilot Pro fits on the desk without crowding it. XPPen has priced it at $209.99, in line with other professional left-hand controllers. For editors who spend serious hours locked into a timeline, a device that keeps the hands comfortable and a hundred commands within reach can meaningfully change the pace of a workday.
