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Nintendo Switch Split Pad Overview
The HORI Split Pad series (primarily Split Pad Pro and Split Pad Compact) are officially licensed Nintendo accessories that replace the Joy-Cons on Nintendo Switch, Switch OLED, and Lite models (via adapters). They transform handheld mode into a pro-controller-like experience with larger grips, full-size analog sticks, precise D-pad, and extra features like turbo and remappable rear buttons. Ideal for extended play sessions to combat Joy-Con fatigue and drift, but they lack HD rumble, gyro/motion controls, NFC (Amiibo), wireless use, and IR camera—use Joy-Cons for those.
These attach directly to the rails (docks fine attached) and draw power from the Switch. Pro model is bulkier for bigger hands; Compact is sleeker for portability/smaller hands/kids. No Switch 2 version yet.
Key Models Comparison
Feature Split Pad Pro Split Pad Compact Size/Grip Larger, pro-controller ergonomics (best for adult/large hands) Smaller, slimmer profile (more portable, kid-friendly) Analog Sticks Full-size, smooth Full-size, textured grips for better control D-Pad Precision full D-pad Same precision D-pad Buttons/Triggers Larger shoulder buttons, rubberized extras Slightly smaller, plastic extras (still improved over Joy-Cons) Rear Buttons 2x assignable per side 2x assignable per side Turbo Yes (3 speeds) Yes (3 speeds) Special Editions Many (Pokémon, Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, Monster Hunter, Sonic) Fewer (Pokémon Pikachu & Mimikyu, pastel colors) Weight Heavier, more stable Lighter Best For Long sessions, fighters/platformers Travel, aesthetics, smaller hands Pros & Cons
Pros:
- Dramatically more comfortable than Joy-Cons (no cramping after 30+ mins).
- Superior sticks/D-pad reduce drift/misinputs; great for precision games (e.g., Zelda, fighters).
- Turbo/remap shine in retro/shooters.
- Durable (many last years); docks attached.
Cons:
- No rumble/gyro (limits Splatoon, BOTW puzzles, motion games).
- Wired/handheld-only (Pro Attachment enables docked wired play).
- Bulkier Pro won’t fit standard cases (need oversized ones); looks “goofy.”
- Occasional drift reports (less than Joy-Cons).



