![]() ![]() That pad has wireless and wired modes, more interchangeable buttons in the box and a carry case, plus its underside paddles are easier to reach, but it also doesn’t have the Razer’s superb button action. The Wolverine’s toughest competition is the Xbox Elite Wireless Controller Series 2, which has the same price. ![]() The four extra buttons on the underside can be awkward to reach too, and you don’t get a carry case. On the downside, this wired pad only comes with a removable 3m USB Type-C cable, but a longer wire would accommodate a wider range of rooms. It’s easy to manage too – Razer’s dedicated PC app allows users to change button assignments, alter the lighting, edit stick sensitivity and change vibration levels. It’s a busy pad, but the Wolverine feels great in the hand – the textured grips work well, build quality is solid and its 270g weight makes it lighter than every official Xbox pad. There’s also an audio button that can increase your system’s volume and adjust the balance between game and chat levels, plus a headphone jack. Razer has also moved the menu and view buttons upwards compared with a standard Xbox pad, and there are two rings of RGB LEDs around the device. You can support the site directly via Paypal donations ☕. TNR earns Amazon affiliate commissions from qualifying purchases.By default, two of those triggers alter the sensitivity of the analogue sticks for precise, slow movement – like a sniper button on a gaming mouse. There are two extra bumpers next to the shoulder buttons and four triggers on the underside. Razer has added plenty of extra buttons to this second incarnation of the Wolverine as well. The shoulder buttons are large too, and switches on the underside convert the triggers to ‘hair trigger mode’, which slashes their travel distance for faster actuation.Īgain, it works well – the new actuation point feels very solid, so you can hammer against them without issue – we found they worked great in fast-paced games such as Call of Duty: Warzone. The convex version is good as well, but it could do with some more texture on its surface. The taller concave version gives you some extra precision but retains the design of the standard stick on top. Razer includes interchangeable caps in the box as well – a taller stick that encourages accuracy, and a short, convex model for improved speed. Meanwhile, glossy casings house the analogue sticks to ensure friction-free movement. The pad’s other buttons don’t have the same hardware, but they’re enhanced elsewhere. The raised D-pad uses the same design, and it has the same impressive feel. Razer claims that this design delivers quicker actuation times than traditional pads, and the buttons do feel fantastic – they’re crisp, comfortable and fast. Interchangeable analogue sticks, RGB lighting 21 (D-pad, action, analogue sticks, shoulder, underside, View, Menu, Share, Audio, Xbox) ![]()
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