I'd like to share an experience of mine with Hall sensors.
Some years ago I borrowed an idea from a video in which F1 drivers trained to think sharply even with high heart rate and physical demand, typical of racing: I made up this workout in which I keep my heart rate in zone two with a stationary bike and at the same time I play a racing simulator with a laptop in front of me: the idea is that I keep my brain trained to think sharply and react quickly even under physical demand of supermoto, motocross and occasional rental karting. Since I play a little bit of flight simulators, I started using a flight sim joystick (coudn't use wheels and pedals anyways on a stationary bike), but that first joystick didn't last much, probably also because of the sweat damaging the potentiometers: I clean the outside surfaces after every use, but I'm not willing to disassemble it every time to dry the components inside. Then, I think at least since 2018, but most likely way before that, I replaced it with a Thrustmaster T16000 M joystick with Hall sensors for the pitch and roll axes and a potentiometer for the throtte axes; to play the racing sim, I only utilize the pitch and roll axes equipped with Hall sensors. The conventional potentiometer for the throttle quickly failed because of the sweat and cleaning it with alcool repaired it for a little while but then it started failing again. The Hall sensors have never failed. That joystick is now prety worn and it has a lot of mechanical play, but the axes controlled via the Hall sensors have never been erratic and are still perfectly reliable.