Other game controllers we have tested
There are many other mobile controllers that we tested that the bus missed a place above or failed to make grades.
Photograph: Simon Hill
Acer Nitro Mobile Gaming Controller for £ 70: Compact design is great for portability, and Acer’s controller even folds in half to slide your pocket or bag. You can plug into devices up to 8.3 inches in size via USB-C, and the controller has standard offset joystick, four standard facial buttons and four shoulders triggers. Everything seems slightly tight and basic; The trigger is fine, but everything else looks a bit HumThere is a USB-C port for pass-through charging, but there is a lack of other features to justify the price (no hall effect, no adaptation, no software). It is still available in the UK.
Gulikit Elvs 2 Pro for $ 50: The size is reminiscent of the old sega controllers, but the gulisit pack hall effects joystics, nine levels of vibration, and six-axes gyro speed control in this Bluetooth controller. The shoulder buttons are good and clicked, and floating is decent to fight the 8-way D-pad game and platforms, although it and four face buttons use a membrane. This is compact, so I was found to be a little uncomfortable to use for the extended period, although I have big hands.
Gxtrust Mylox Wireless Mobile Controller for £ 45: It connects through Bluetooth 5.0 instead of a large cradle-style controller USB-C. It supports basic haptic feedback and has RGB LED-Illuminated buttons. It is very comfortable to use, but it looks a bit cheap, and despite the large design, buttons and triggers are small. I am not eager for D-Pad. If you turn on the lighting, the battery life is well reduced by the suggested 12 hours. It is available only in the UK and Europe.
Gamesir X3 Pro for $ 80: It replaces X3 and is open to raise almost any Android phone (or USB-C iPhones) in its rubber embrace. It feels good, customized grips, clicky buttons, and thumbstick with different sized viosual caps in beautiful zip-up carry case with hall effect thumbstick. The headline feature is the largest fan on the competent back in severe cooling power, which can come in handy because the smartphones can be uncomfortable while gaming for a long time, although I found the sound annoying, and the X3 Pro is very heavy. The adaptation options are welcome, but the gamer app is a little shorter car and confusing.
Asus Rog Tessen for $ 104: When I started using Rog Tessen, my enthusiasm on the possibility of a mobile controller from ASUS was very quick. It has a clean folding design, responsible control and pass-through charging. I liked the programable back paddle, and is RGB lighting to jazz. But the thumbs felt uncomfortable very quickly, and the button proved to be a little noise. It is also Android-only and does not work with any iPhone (even USB-C iPhones).
Gamesir X4 Aileron for $ 100: This controller has a lot for this, including a compact design, RGB lighting, hall effect sticks and touch buttons. It comes in two parts, which is very good for turning it neatly, but it means that you should be added to one side, then the other, and it can be a finish. This is not a bad attempt, but there are better options above.
CRKD Nuclear Controller for $ 20: This little controller is super cute and very portable, you can connect to a bag with a wrist strap. The battery life with the USB-C port for recharging goes for 10 hours, although I found that it sometimes replaces itself in my pocket. It is not enough or comfortable to use it for a long time, but if you need a super portable emergency controller, it can fit the bill.
Photograph: Simon Hill
Turtle Beach Atom Controller for $ 50: With a clever two-tukra design, this controller goes away from very neatly, but feels insecure without back. The clamps on each side are strange, especially with a large camera module playing phone. I had trouble connecting, and the dislike was to turn the right side separately (press B and menu button). The right connects wireless (2.4 GHz) on the right, but the controller connects to your phone through Bluetooth. It mostly worked for me, but when I played Jydge, The movement was turned upside down on the left stick. You get a battery life of about 20 hours. It takes about two hours to charge. If the portability is your main concern, then it May Be worth watching
Power XP Ultra for $ 80: I like the idea of combining the weight of options in a controller, and the crazy XP Ultra of Power is definitely versatile. It works wirelessly with your Xbox, Windows PC, or Android phones, offering solid battery life (up to 40 hours through Bluetooth or up to 60 hours for Xbox). But the gimmick mini controller, which slides the transformer-style for moving gaming, is very small and difficult to catch comfortably. The buttons, triggers, and sticks are all good, and the clip works fine to keep your phone, but the D-pad is rigid. Among all, it is an expensive mixed bag.
Riot PWR iOS Xbox Edition Cloud Gaming Controller for $ 20, It is designed for Apple’s handset or iPad gaming (old lightening port device) for the iPhone-certified controller, which is covered through pass-charging, direct lightening cable connections and 3.5-mm audio ports. It seems like an Xbox controller, Xbox cloud supports gaming or remote play, and the game comes with a free month. On the negative side, the cable is slightly messed up. ($ 40) Riot PWR MFI Controller Almost identical, but without garish green style and colored Xbox button. There is also a USB-C option.
Turtle beach cloud to $ 40: Here is another Xbox-branded controller who supports Xbox cloud gaming and remote play and comes with a free month near the game. It feels good that there is a solid phone clip in the hand, and works with Android, Xbox and Windows. It has some audio enhancements (when plug in), programmable button, and an easy Pro-AMI feature that reduces sensitivity to the right stick for the target in FPS games. This is a good upgrade pick on the power controller listed above, but only when you want additional features.
Power Moga XP7-X Plus for $ 94: This controller does XP-5 x provides everything, but you can also remove the stand in the center to slot your phone (my pixel 6 Pro fits well). It is strong, provides a lot of buttons (only a screenshot button is missing), and can charge your phone by wirelessly. But this is expensive, when I prefer USB-C, there is a micro USB port, and it has only 2,000 mAh battery, so be with the XP-5 x until you want to fit your phone to fit your phone.
8bitdo SN30 Pro for $ 45: Memories of SNES, this controller works with Android, Windows, McOS and switch. It has built-in rumble, a solid de-pad, good battery life and a USB-C port.
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