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The NES30 also comes with a free plastic stand for your phone, a handy addition when you're travelling.


A small Bluetooth indicator light and and red/green power light sit beside it. A MicroUSB cable is included in the box, but there's no wall outlet adapter. A standard MicroUSB port hangs out on the top edge, enabling easy recharging with just about any Android phone charger. The Bluetooth gadget needs a little extra hardware to get everything working. The trigger buttons are small but functional, about the same size as the ones on the Nintendo DS Lite. Keeping to roughly the same original spacing of the face buttons, this makes the A/B/X/Y area seem a little lopsided compared with the D-pad. (The A/B/X/Y buttons and now embossed like more modern controllers as well.) In fact, the layout is basically the same one found on the SNES (and incidentally the Nintendo DS), but crammed into the smaller, sharper body of the NES controller.

The face buttons are rearranged, shifting the side-by-side A/B layout from the original controller into the cross configuration that Nintendo introduced with the Super NES, and which is still more or less universal today. The biggest draw for this device is that it brings the NES controller a bit forward in time, adding two extra red face buttons for a total of four and bolting on L and R shoulder buttons.
