On the Moga side, the sliding analog sticks and a lighter D-pad make directional input much easier, but the buttons are tiny and not well built. In games where you need to hold down a direction to keep your character walking, like Bastion and Limbo, it’s literally painful to keep pressing hard enough so the controller actually recognizes your input. It’s annoyingly hard to press, and crunches when you roll it around. With only a single D-pad to serve that purpose, Logitech’s job was to make that D-pad the very best D-pad it could possibly be, and it’s nothing of the sort. The primary thing that these devices add to the experience is directional control over your games. More importantly, the PowerShell and Ace Power aren’t very good at their job. If you want to use headphones, you’ll need to carry around a special headphone adapter dongle - one issue that the Moga sidesteps by routing audio through the Lightning jack itself. The power button toggle to wake the screen doesn’t work on an iPod touch. The Logitech PowerShell’s grippy rubberized surfaces feel far better at first, much more like a case than a controller, but it has its issues too. The heads of the analog sticks feel loose, like they might break off. It’s a hollow black plastic contraption with a glossy finish that scratches at the slightest provocation, and rough seams and pointy corners that poke me whenever I try to retrieve my device. The Ace Power’s latch and spring-loaded mechanism do manage to securely hold a phone in place, but the device feels too much like a toy. Sadly, the Logitech PowerShell and Moga Ace Power don’t feel like $100 game controllers. As soon as you jump into a compatible game, things should just work. You simply slot your iOS device into the PowerShell or Moga frame so it seats on the Apple Lightning connector, and you’re done. There’s no clunky Bluetooth radios to pair or anything of the sort.
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