All the age of controller-enabled iOS gaming has given us so far is a pair of wraparound shell controllers that only work with newer iPhones or iPod Touches. Whereâs the iPad love? SteelSeries brings the iPad love with the Stratus â the first official wireless gaming controller for iOS 7.
SteelSeries has been in the iOS controller business since before the iOS controller business was a thing. Prior to last yearâsiOS 7 update, the only way to get a gamepad to work on iOS was to cheat. Thatâs exactly what the tiny SteelSeriesâ Free Mobile Controller did. It told iOS devices it was a keyboard. iOS devices believed it.
Now we have the Stratus.
WHAT IS IT?
The Stratus is a miniature gamepad for iOS devices, specifically any iOS 7 device with a lightning port. It doesnât use the lightning port â itâs a Bluetooth 2.1 machine. Itâs just an easy way to group supported iOS 7 devices without typing out a long list. If itâs got a lightning port, this will work on it.
The Stratus is a variation of the same design as 2012âs Free. Theyâve dropped the rubberized plastic (so 2012), defined the cheekbones a bit further, added a second set of shoulder buttons and swapped âselectâ and âstartâ with a single pause/home button.
WHO IS IT FOR?
Any iPad gamer whoâs watched jealously as the iPhone and iPod Touch users got MOGA and Logitech controllers to play with. Also iPhone and iPod Touch users whoâd rather not extended their rectangles any further.
Oh, and people with incredibly tiny hands. Theyâll really appreciate this one.
WHAT I DID WITH IT
I played games with it, as recommended on the package. I played a selection of controller supporting titles on both my Retina iPad Mini and my iPhone 5c.
WHAT I LIKED
iPad Support â The biggest advantage of the Stratus over Power A and Logitechâs initial offerings, the Stratus works with the iPad, and they donât. No wraparound case means no worries about the size of your device. In short, if you want an official gamepad for you iPad, this is it.
Itâs So Tiny â At 4.33 inches long, 2.66 inches wide and weighing less than a fifth of a pound, the Stratus isnât simply tiny, itâs wonderfully unobtrusive. This is a game controller that you can put in your pocket and wander about town without the foremost thought in your head being âThereâs a game controller in my pocket.â
It Works Quite Well â The years of engineering that went into the Free Mobile Controller are applied here, resulting in a pocket-sized controller that â most of the time â wonât feel like a pocket-sized controller. The pressure sensitive face and shoulder buttons are lovely to touch. The analog sticks are capped with rubber nubs that love on your thumbs as you play. At its best itâs a full-sized controller that just takes up a lot less space.
WHAT I DIDNâT LIKE
No Playing While Charging â Around ten hours of play time on a full charge is great. Two hours of charging to a full charge isnât bad. The fact that plugging the charging cable into the controller shuts it off until the cable is removed? Thatâs unfortunate.
Those Shoulder Buttons â Every time I have to give the Stratus the old L2/R2 reach-around I feel a little dirty.
If a game requires the L2 or R2 be pressed for any extended period of time, either remap the control if possible or just play with the touchscreen, because ow. Iâm looking at you, Sonic All-Stars Racing Transformed.
Fiddling With Bluetooth â Is the controller connected? Is it paired? These arenât questions users of the Power A or Logitech shell controllers have to worry about. Those controllers plug directly into their deviceâs lightning port and once connected, they just work. Itâs not particularly hard to pair the Stratus, but sometimes itâs hard to tell if itâs connected. A lot of that is these early days of iOS controller support â many developers are still leaving menus purely touch navigable, so you donât know if the controller is working until the race starts. Either way, itâs an additional step users of the shell controllers donât have to worry about.
Itâs So Tiny â Tiny is wonderful if youâre gaming on the go, but when I am sitting at home with my iPad or iPhone hooked up to my TV via HDMI, whatâs the point?
MY FINAL WORD
The SteelSeries Stratus is currently the only wireless Bluetooth controller certified by Apple. Itâs the only official gamepad solution for the iPad. Itâs a wonderfully engineered product that gets the job done.
Itâs also a relatively major investment. Like MOGA and Logitechâs controller offerings, this tiny bundle of crafted plastic runs $99. Iâm guessing thatâs a price point dictated by Apple, because I canât imagine a product manager looked at this thing and went âOh yeah, thatâs a hundred dollar item right there.â
But letâs not quibble over coinage. The real issue here is the size. Take a look at this promotional video for the Stratus.
Those are two hardcore gamers right there. Theyâve got SteelSeries headsets on. Theyâre sitting in a darkened room with their iPad on a stand. In their hands, a controller that, from a distance, looks like a Happy Meal Toy, or the tins GameStop sells during the holidays to hold gift cards used to purchase full size controllers.
The SteelSeries Stratus will be available soon at SteelSeries.com.