Thirty(ish) bucks well spent

I skipped theNES gamepads, but those new SNES controllers for Nintendo Switch? I couldn’t resist!

In a word: fantastic. Just like I remember. I don’t regret my impulse buy.

The official SNES controller for Nintendo Switch

As expected, the d-pad is the crown jewel of the controller–so much so, I’m planning on busting this out for anything and everything I can on Switch, not just the still-fairly-limited SNES game library. Next order of business:Collection of Mana, which I only just cracked into the other week. It’s slow-going.

The rest of the controller feels spot-on, too. The start and select buttons have the right amount of squishiness. The shoulder buttons aren’t stiff–a problem I’ve faced with second-hand Super Nintendo gamepads in the past–and the A/B/X/Y buttons are as comfortable and natural-feeling as ever.

Wuyang OW2 ultimate

Basically, everything works as anticipated, with one big caveat: there’s no home button.

When you’re inside the Nintendo Switch Online SNES app, you can hit ZR, and that’ll take you to your Switch home screen, no problem. But otherwise, if you’re playing another game (I triedBlasphemous), you’ll need to go home with either a different controller or the Switch itself if you’re in handheld mode.

Football Manager 26 promo art

Speaking of the ZL and ZR buttons, they’re about as tiny as they can be, but they’re functional. In the SNES app, you’re able to press them together to quickly create a save state and, given their placement, you’re never going to accidentally hit them. That’s nice. I also appreciate that the app uses alternate menu-navigation sound effects inspired bySuper Mario Worldwhen an SNES controller is connected.

Really, it comes down to your own preferences.

I know plenty of you are super happy with your8BitDo controllers, and that’s something everyone should consider before buying a Switch Online SNES pad. If you’re a die-hard Super Nintendo fan, though… it’s tough. The nostalgia factor and build quality make this surprisingly hard to ignore.

Even if Nintendo somehow never added any more SNES games, I’d still be okay with this purchase. Just make sure you don’t get one expecting to play analog-stick-only games likeZelda: Link’s Awakening.

Cover for Max Payne

[This impressions piece is based on retail hardware purchased by the author.]

Black Ops 7 key art work

PEAK mesa biome text

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CoD BO7 The Guild robot

Drag x Drive passing

A ruined police station in Raccoon City in Resident Evil Requiem.