
Razer
The Razer Kishi V3 series offers full‑size, console‑grade mobile gaming controllers with wired USB‑C connectivity, zero latency, and advanced TMR thumbsticks, supporting iPhone 15‑17 and a range of tablets up to 13‑inches. Variants add haptic vibration, rear paddles, and swappable thumbstick caps for deeper customization.
Pros
Current
$99.99
Average
$99.33
Lowest
$96.99
Highest
$99.99
Lower = better sales rank
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Cons
From Expert Reviews
Praised by Experts
Criticized by Experts
From User Reviews
Users Love
Users Complain About
Expert Opinion
Professional reviewers describe the Kishi V3 line as a game‑changing solution for mobile gamers, emphasizing its zero‑latency wired connection, console‑grade ergonomics, and highly tunable TMR thumbsticks. The addition of bilateral haptics and rear paddles on Pro models is praised as bringing a true console feel to phones and tablets, though weight and marginal tablet fit are noted as drawbacks.
What Users Say
Everyday users love the plug‑and‑play simplicity, comfortable grip, and the ability to charge their device while playing. Common praise centers on the responsive sticks and immersive haptics, while recurring complaints focus on the controller’s heft and occasional fit issues on the largest tablets.
Common Complaints
Hand fatigue from combined weight, marginal clearance on 13‑inch tablets, need to tweak rubber stabilizers for certain cases, and the absence of trigger stops on the XL version.
What People Are Saying
“game changer”
“world's first full-sized tablet controller”
How It Compares
vs. GameSir G8 Galileo
Advantages
Disadvantages
Choose GameSir if you need a lightweight phone‑only controller with analog triggers; choose Razer for tablet support, haptic depth, and premium stick customization.
vs. Backbone One
Advantages
Disadvantages
Backbone is suited for users who prioritize wireless convenience on phones; Razer is better for low‑latency, console‑grade control on phones and tablets.