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PowerA Enhanced Wireless Controller For Nintendo Switch - Pokemon Shield (Nintendo Switch)

  • Based on 19,955 reviews
Condition: Used - Very Good
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Availability: Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by JMS Holdings

Arrives Wednesday, Mar 25
Order within 19 hours and 22 minutes
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Color: Pokemon Shield


Pattern Name: Controller


Features

  • Wireless freedom using Bluetooth 5.0
  • Features motion controls and mappable advanced gaming buttons
  • Ergonomic controller with standard button layout and Pokemon shield design
  • LEDs for player number, button mapping, and low battery warning
  • Includes two AA batteries for up to 30 hours of gameplay
  • Officially licensed by Nintendo and the Pokemon Company international
  • Two-year Warranty - register at powera. COM

Description

Play your favorite Nintendo Switch games like a pro with this officially licensed PowerA Enhanced Wireless Controller. Built for comfort during extended gaming sessions, this Bluetooth wireless controller features motion controls, mappable Advanced Gaming Buttons, and standard ergonomic layout. Enjoy up to 30 hours of gameplay with new alkaline batteries or add your own rechargeable batteries.

Release date: December 12, 2019


Product Dimensions: 2.6 x 6.3 x 6.4 inches; 9.17 ounces


Type of item: Video Game


Item model number: 1512379-01


Item Weight: 9.2 ounces


Manufacturer: POWER A


Batteries: 2 AA batteries required. (included)


Date First Available: September 12, 2019


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Wednesday, Mar 25

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great option for a Pro controller stand-in!
Color: Teal Frost Pattern Name: Controller
First, I would like to say that I'm a sucker for turqoise, having grown up with a GameBoy Color of said color; the minute I saw this, I HAD to have it. Now, on to the main things to say, I got Power A's wireless GameCube controller with Christmas money, and fell for it right away; however, the button layout mostly works for Smash Bros. Ultimate, since some Switch games don't give you control-change options. With this in mind, I decided to look into getting one of these when I could afford it. Day one, I played with it quite a bit, playing three maps in Hyrule Warriors Definitive Edition to test out its button latency, and control, and I can safely say that both control sticks work like a charm, the buttons feel natural to press, and even the shortcut buttons on the back help quite a bit! I currently have them set for the left and right d-pad, myself, so I can cycle through my items without stopping to use the control pad. The L, ZL, R, and ZR buttons are sorta clicky, and mildly loose, so they wiggle a bit, but they do exactly as they need to, and they feel just right to press. The home buttons are small, and plastic-y, but that's somewhat expected; they do feel nice to press, and their being right in the middle of the controller make them easy to reach! Now for the d-pad itself. It differs from the rest of the controller, being a metal pad, for some reason; it's nice, and it's pretty, and feels surprisingly nice to use. It responds well when pressed, and I was able to use it to play Super Mario World quite well! At least, until the first castle. I noticed that diagonal presses to the up and right were hardly registering, even though diagonal down-right, and down-left worked just fine. I don't know for certain if it's this model of controller, or if it's a simple fix, but it's going to make platformer gaming more cumbersome for me. Even despite this, though, every other feature of the controller feels just right, so hopefully it won't interfere with my gaming too much. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2019 by Colin Kimsey

  • Great for second player
Color: Overwatch Reaper Pattern Name: Controller
Nice controller! Love the design!
Reviewed in the United States on October 6, 2025 by Gabriell Amos

  • Great reliability with branding to boot.
Color: Spyro Pattern Name: Controller
A good, inexpensive alternative to Nintendo’s pro controller. I’d recommend it if you don’t mind a shortcoming or two. Any controller would do if you’re trying to save a LOT of wear-and-tear on your joy-cons. (Sticks tend to drift after a while, as a lot of people know) This does have the added boon of being wireless, and having several branding choices (Zelda, Mario, Pokémon and Spyro to name a few) However, there are some things you should know about if you like reading reviews more than specifications menus. This is obviously not Nintendo’s pro controller. It’s meant to be an input device and it reflects that. There’s none of that flashy vibration or gyroscope going on, but that’s ok. It doesn’t need that to be a perfectly good and reliable controller. Everything works perfectly well and the feel of it is quite comfortable, regardless of hand size. I’ve had mine for almost a year now and have had no wear whatsoever. It’s a well loved and used item which I will continue using even once something breaks. In short: if you don’t mind not having some of the features of Nintendo’s pro controller, and love the look of PowerA’s licensed items, this may be the item for you. It’s a perfectly good controller and reliable all the time. Well recommended. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2020 by Alex

  • Currently My Top Choice When Buying Two-Joystick Controller
Color: Black Pattern Name: Controller
This PowerA Enhanced Wireless Controller for Nintendo Switch (PAN, I got the black one) is the controller I use most often when I don't need my keyboard/mouse nor Steam Controller for fine tuned aiming or clicking. If I had to buy a controller that has two joysticks, this would currently be the one to buy. I like the feel, weight (Footnote #1), rear extra buttons, and like being able to pop in AA rechargeable batteries on the fly (I always have an extra charged set of AAs handy so I never really run out of battery). I hate controllers that you have to plug in to charge, because it runs out of battery at the worst times, and then having a cord sticking out messes with movement as well as injects another point of failure if it’s caught or bent on something. Also, the plug-in-to-charge controllers usually have hard-to-replace and buy batteries whereas AA rechargeables are cheap and insanely easy to find and replace. I won't really hold this controller to the standard of a keyboard/mouse nor the Steam Controller (SC), because for what those two are good for, they are far superior. You can't beat aiming with a mouse nor plethora of buttons with a keyboard, and the Steam Controller has an insane amount of niceties that work very, very well together (it’s great for games with some aiming). For instance with the Steam Controller, triggers with smooth start that sends analog signal first and then a clicky digital input at the end, touchpads that gently and precisely vibrate to give lots of different feelings (not just BUZZZZ) that also let you do fast and precise motions mimicking a joystick or mouse on your choice, rear buttons that are extremely easy to push that can be programmed to be anything (not just buttons on the controller), it has a gyro that is perfect to use with the touchpads, I could go on ... the Steam Controller is still my #1 choice of controller if I had no other controllers for use cases. Compared to the Xbox One Wireless (XO), it doesn't work in UWP microsoft store games, which is not PowerA's fault, no other controllers that I have seem to work with UWP games (not SC, not DS4, not this one only the XO seems to be allowed, just one of the many reasons why I don’t buy UWP games). It has to use bluetooth, and haven’t tested it with multiple PAN controllers, so I wonder how that holds up (the XO controller has to use use an adapter to connect multiple controller, but I don’t think a special adapter is required for DS4, PAN, nor SC[plus all SCs come with a free adapter whereas with XO you pay extra]). XO doesn’t have a gyro. Compared to the Dual Shock 4 (DS4) and XO, the PAN triggers are clicky digital with no analog movement (but that’s apparently true of all Nintendo triggers now oddly, Ive really grown to like the dual-stage triggers on the SC). It turns itself on when you touch ANY PAN button (so annoying when trying to put it away). HAS REAR BUTTONS YOU CAN CHANGE ON THE FLY!!! All controllers need to have this from here on out, I won’t buy a controller without it (PAN has it and SC has it, it’s insanely useful). I wish the PAN controller’s rear button could be mapped to joystick down presses (I hate joystick down presses usually because they are often required when you’re supposed to be moving the joystick too). I do like the button and joystick feel of the XO and DS4 controllers a bit better BUT the PAN buttons joystick, triggers are totally fine and I haven’t felt the need to go back and give up the rear buttons (compared to XO) nor easy-swap batteries (compared to DS4). Compared to DS4, they both have a gyro. You have to plug in the DS4 to charge it (built in battery instead of easy hot-swap batteries like the PAN). DS4 has a touchpad in the middle WITH different clicks! The joysticks are better, and it’s easier to push down on them (best implementation of joystick click I’ve seen). Otherwise, I think if the DS4 had rear buttons that can be seperately controlled (not just hardware mapped but able to use Steam to change them to whatever I want), hot-swap AAs, and I could put the controller into ABXY scheme so games used it automatically, and no vibration motors inside, it would beat the NAN and XO controller as far as controller performance goes. If the DS4 also had dual stage triggers… wow. I would still use my SC for games with some aiming (and mouse for a lot of aiming or clicking/RTS/management games), but it would probably be my go-to controller. However, for the price, features and build quality, this PowerA Enhanced Wireless Controller for Nintendo Switch (PAN) is my top two-joystick controller currently. Footnote #1: It saves weight by not having those ridiculous vibration motors inside, which some people oddly consider the extra weight to make the controller feel “premium,” which is a bit silly, plus having vibration that strong kills the battery too quickly so I don’t want it) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2019 by Ducain

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