I have always praised efforts to feel comparable to my experience gaming on the console with a controller with a controller in hand. I have a riot PWR controller who mimics a couple of Xbox Gamepad, a couple of backbones and some other random ones, but no one has given me the feeling that I was doing anything more than working it. I always want something better, something more premium. With the latest controller of the razor, Kishi V3 Pro, I finally have the controller I always want when I am gaming on my iPhone.
Come, get some caves out of the way, before I love Kishi V3 Pro: it is far away and is the most expensive mobile gaming controller out of there, close to the dualsense age of the playstation and is more expensive than the baseline controllers of Playstation, Xbox and Nintendo. It is available for $ 149.99 worldwide today. It is also available only with the USB-C connection, which means that you will need one of the new iPhones of Apple (if you have an Android phone, you are possibly set) or iPad mini to use it. If you want to use a full-sized iPad with it, there is some better characteristics of Pro for $ 99.99 and a non-ex-ex-version for the Pro XL version.
While this price is excessive for a mobile controller, once you cut the bullet, you will not regret it.

Immediately after opening the box, you are congratulated with a premium packaging with a clockey foam to ensure that the controller is safe. With the controller of me – there was another set of analog stick to connect to the pro -controller: round bump sticks and traditional concave sticks. I like the latter to the left for the movement and the rapid target as east as east. Swaping these sticks is as easy as pulling them with a little force, but it does not feel terrible as you are breaking the device. You will also find some gummy plastic inserts that provide individual bumper shapes at the top of your phone, on the left (or top), which is not connected to the USB-C connection port. The box is so cute that I am using it as the “case” of the controller, when not in use, and I appreciate the presentation of razor’s apple with packaging. If people are expected to pay $ 150, every aspect, including the box, needs to feel worth that price tag.
The razor Nexus app was motivated to download, I do this and am free of Happy, because it is a very good game launcher that is available in mobile games simultaneously (which are available in the app store (which are well added with the apple arcade with 3 months, and exBOX PC Games for Cloud Streaming or Remote Play. In my briefing with the razor team, emphasized that Nexus is independent and will surely sure to shade “other” mobile control apps, which are not free, cough, backbone+, which costs $ 50 after a free year test.
Even if Nexus was not present, the Kishi V3 Pro is still an excellent controller. Its design looks similar to an Xbox controller and has enough gand to feel premium, vs. something seems that it is doing its best to mimic a standard controller, but remembering the mark. Razor says the USB-C connection makes very little promise for any delay, although it is believed that I have never made delay issues on the mobile controller I have used.
There is a lot of adaptation under the hood, even, swapble thumbstick and phone bumper. The trigger can be switched to an analog or digital mode, allowing you to customize their spirit, how much you need to press before entering the input, and much more. The two back “paddle” buttons are circles that hold your hand around the controller, and they feel similar to clicking on a mouse. I have not used them too much, but I can imagine possibilities with shooters, strategy games and other styles where a mouse click is often more competitive than trigger.
Tunnel Magnetoresistance (or TMR) thumbsticks are apparently more accurate than long -lasting and other types, including the hall effect thumbsticks according to the razor, and when I will need longer for testing, I can say that they feel incredible. The same hall goes for effect trigger, 8-way D-pad and face button. There are also two additional buttons the top two additional buttons for more adaptation. The entire package is raised by the razor’s Sensa HD haptics, which especially feel quite premium for a mobile controller. Although haptics have been proud of him at any time game Changer Controller Makers, I will compare Sense HD haptics with Nintendo’s Joy-C and PlayStens Hyptics technology.

If you are not familiar with the mobile gaming controller market, these are characteristics that you will not find in other controllers. Instead of taking a more casual approach to designing a controller for use with the phone, the razor has assumed that dualsense age or exbox elite controllers appeal for the game’s market – this is for those who want tinker and toy with small adaptable options, which players do not want to do not want their phones. The riot PWR controller works, backbone works, and therefore makes my other random equipment, but no one feels intentionally as Kishi V3 Pro. It sounds like a controller that will become an integral piece of my gaming rotation, rather than that I only use on aircraft or as a quick fix, which has been late for me. Of course, this is my first Kishi, so perhaps this line of controllers has always been like this. Nevertheless, I think this is the company’s best swing.
At the end of the day, however, it is still a mobile gaming controller. If you play a lot of mobile games, Kishi is not a better controller than the V3 Pro, as long as you do not believe in fake gamers and my boss, Kyliard. If the spirit of gaming through your mobile device has always disrupted your desire to do so, this controller may change it, but if mobile gaming is not just for you, then this controller is not possible. However, Kishi V3 Pro has tried out of water by every other mobile controller. This is the best controller for my iPhone that I have ever used, and I am eager to take my game (and this controller) with me to go with me.
Razor Kishi V3 Pro is available for $ 149.99 today.