
Battery life has always been the quiet asterisk on handheld gaming. The Nintendo Switch 2’s internal battery offers roughly two to six and a half hours, depending on what’s running, which is plenty for a short commute but not enough for a long flight or an afternoon away from an outlet. Most players either play conservatively or keep a cable nearby. Neither approach is especially graceful.
Belkin’s Charging Grip for the Nintendo Switch 2 takes a different approach to the problem. Rather than asking you to stop and plug in, the grip attaches a 10,000 mAh magnetic power bank directly to the back of the console, turning the Switch 2 into a more capable device without fundamentally changing how it feels to use. The power bank snaps on magnetically and charges through a built-in USB-C cable at up to 30W, delivering up to 1.5 times the console’s original battery capacity.
Designer: Belkin
What makes the design considered is what it doesn’t break. Joy-Cons still detach from the console normally without removing the grip first. The Switch 2’s built-in kickstand still deploys. The console still docks without modification. Each compatibility point matters for anyone moving fluidly between handheld play on a train, tabletop gaming across a table, and television sessions on the couch.
The ergonomic side adds something beyond the battery. Handheld gaming on the Switch 2 in its stock form is functional but not generous in how it fills the hands, particularly over long sessions. The Charging Grip’s non-slip handles extend the form to something closer to a conventional controller, distributing the weight more evenly and making sustained play noticeably more comfortable. The ergonomic benefit is there regardless of how much charge the power bank has left.
An LED display on the grip shows the remaining power bank charge, so there’s no guesswork about whether it’s worth detaching before a trip. The power bank itself detaches magnetically when you’d rather not carry the extra weight, which keeps the grip useful on lighter travel days too. Available in Black and Olive, both colorways match the restrained aesthetic of the Switch 2 rather than drawing attention to the accessory.
Belkin made the grip from recycled plastic and ships it in 100% plastic-free packaging, a material decision that adds environmental consideration without affecting physical quality. The 10,000 mAh power bank also works as a standalone unit, giving the grip an afterlife if the console ever changes or needs replacing. It’s one of the quieter but more thoughtful spec decisions in the package.
The Charging Grip for Nintendo Switch 2 is priced at $99.99 and is available directly from Belkin in two colors. For a device whose most consistent criticism is how quickly its battery disappears under demanding games, an accessory that meaningfully extends that runtime while improving ergonomics makes a straightforward case for most people who use their Switch 2 regularly outside the house.