
Nintendo invented a magic trick in 2017 and most of the industry still hasn’t figured out how to copy it properly. Slide the Switch out of its dock and you have a handheld; slam it back in and the same console inherits your television instantly, no cables to fumble, no menu to chase. The PSP never had that option, the Vita barely attempted it, and even the Steam Deck treats docking like an afterthought rather than a core feature. The trick only really works at home though, since Nintendo’s official dock weighs 383 grams and behaves more like furniture than a travel companion. GuliKit apparently noticed that gap and decided the magic trick deserved to leave the house.
GuliKit’s answer ships as a dock measuring 8.6 centimeters per side and weighing 105 grams, light enough to disappear into a backpack pocket built for cables. A flap on the back conceals the USB-C input and the ventilation slots, keeping dust out whether the dock spends its time in an airport tray or a gravel campsite. Around back, three ports cover the essentials, USB-C for power, USB-A for accessories, and HDMI supporting 4K at 60 frames per second with HDR and ALLM for responsive play on a real television. A built-in slider shifts the connector across three depths, so the dock still clicks home even through a protective case. It costs $29.99, works across the original Switch, the OLED model, and the Switch 2, and skips only the Lite, which never had video output to dock in the first place.
Designer: GuliKit
The shell reads more workstation accessory than gaming peripheral, a gray aluminum block with chamfered edges and no visible screws you’d see. That visual DNA puts it closer to a Satechi hub than the black plastic boxes usually parked next to a Steam Deck. GuliKit splits the unit into two volumes instead of one, a slim cradle for the console and a separate base for power delivery, mirroring how premium charging stands separate function from form. The dust flap over the USB-C input and vents gives away the real design brief, built to survive a backpack bottom rather than a coffee table. Restraint like that is rare at this price.
At $29.99, the GuliKit Dock undercuts most third party Switch accessories that bother with full 4K HDMI output, a category that often charges twice as much for less portability. The official Nintendo dock remains the most reliable option, but it was never built for travel, and most owners leave it permanently wired to a television. Compare that to the Steam Deck ecosystem, where Valve sells a dock separately and third parties have flooded the gap with everything from docking stations to cheap HDMI dongles. GuliKit’s bet centers on size rather than price, wagering that portability is what travelers actually want. Judging by the spec sheet, that bet looks well placed.
The GuliKit Dock’s real significance has less to do with its spec sheet and more to do with the signal it sends to accessory makers still treating Switch docks as an afterthought. Nintendo built a console that promises gaming anywhere, and for eight years the dock has been the one piece of hardware that broke that promise the moment you left the house. A 105 gram aluminum block won’t replace the official dock for a permanent setup, nor should it try to. But for anyone who has shoved the official dock into a suitcase and regretted it, this finally treats portability as a feature. If the experiment sells, expect the market to notice.