Transparent Purple Makes This $35 Phone Controller Impossible to Ignore

Touch controls on smartphones are a compromise most mobile gamers have learned to live with. They work well enough for casual games designed around them, but the moment you try running a classic arcade title or an emulated game that expects physical buttons, things fall apart quickly. Your thumbs slide off invisible buttons, precision goes out the window, and the whole appeal of playing a retro game on the go quietly evaporates.

The GameSir Pocket Taco is a clamp-style vertical controller that clips around your phone and instantly turns it into something far closer to a proper handheld console. The design is vertical rather than the sideways landscape grip most mobile controllers use, which puts the phone in portrait style and gives the whole setup that unmistakable Game Boy silhouette. It’s a specific choice that makes a lot of sense for the kind of games it’s clearly built around.

Designer: GameSir

The Voltage Purple colorway is a new option for the Pocket Taco, arriving a few months after the original retro grey version launched. Where the original leaned into a deliberately aged aesthetic, Voltage Purple reads much more confidently as a contemporary gaming accessory. Both versions carry the same hardware and features, so the choice between them comes down entirely to how you want the thing to look in your hand.

The buttons are the central selling point. Cushioned membrane ABXY and D-pad inputs sit at the bottom of the controller, backed by tactile switch triggers and bumpers, and the whole layout comes together in a way that feels genuinely satisfying for side-scrollers, shoot ’em ups, and anything else designed around a proper gamepad. A turbo function covers all eight main buttons, which the hardcore retro gaming crowd will appreciate immediately.

The Pocket Taco handles some practical concerns that most accessories at this price point ignore. Soft silicone pads line the phone clamp area to prevent scratches, a hollow gap at the bottom aligns with your phone’s charging port so you can top up during longer sessions, and the whole thing powers on automatically when you unfold it and shuts off when you close it. At 62.2 g, it barely adds any noticeable weight.

The GameSir App extends the experience further with button remapping, D-pad diagonal lock, and G-Touch and V-Touch functions for on-screen input simulation. There’s also a keyboard mode built in, letting you switch input types for games or apps that need it. A 600 mAh battery handles cordless sessions, and the package includes a storage box, a charging cable, and a lanyard so the whole thing stays organized between uses.

The Pocket Taco in Voltage Purple retails for $34.99, while the original grey version currently sits at $29.99. The $5 difference comes down entirely to the color choice. At 78mm x 70.9mm x 20.7mm, it slips into a pocket or bag with the storage box without much fuss, which keeps the pitch for daily carry entirely believable for anyone who tends to game in short bursts throughout the day.

It’s not a controller for every kind of mobile gaming. If you spend most of your time in landscape-format games that already support proper controller input, a horizontal grip will serve you better. But for anyone running emulators, arcade titles, or vertical shoot ’em ups on their phone, the Pocket Taco fills a gap that the rest of the mobile controller market has mostly ignored.