Skip to main content

8BitDo’s wireless Nintendo 64 controller is now available

The 8BitDo 64 is compatible with the Switch 2, but with just one joystick its ability to play modern games is limited.

The 8BitDo 64 is compatible with the Switch 2, but with just one joystick its ability to play modern games is limited.

If you buy something from a Verge link, Vox Media may earn a commission. See our ethics statement.

8bitdoN642
8bitdoN642
You’ll have to wait a big longer for the Analogue 3D, but 8BitDo’s N64 controller remake is now avialable.
Image: 8BitDo
Andrew Liszewski
is a senior reporter who’s been covering and reviewing the latest gadgets and tech since 2006, but has loved all things electronic since he was a kid.

Analogue’s 4K remake of the Nintendo 64 has been delayed again and again due to the US tariff situation. But at least you can get 8BitDo’s updated take on the N64 controller, which was announced alongside the Analogue 3D, while you wait. You can get one through Amazon in white or black for $39.99 and while it’s one of 8BitDo’s more budget-friendly controllers, its functionality is limited.

The Nintendo 64, which launched in 1996, had an unusual three-prong controller design, with a single analog joystick in the center of the gamepad above the middle grip. The 8BitDo 64 offers the same buttons as the N64’s controller in a more traditional layout, but while it’s easier to hold, the lack of a second joystick limits its compatibility with modern games, which generally expect two. The 8BitDo 64 is compatible with the Switch, Switch 2 (after updating the controller’s firmware), Windows, and Android devices and connects to consoles, PCs, and mobile devices using either a Bluetooth connection or a USB cable.

The black and white versions of the 8BitDo 64 wireless controller next to matching versions of the Analogue 3D console.
The 8BitDo 64 is available in black or white and works with the Switch, Switch 2, Windows, and Android devices.
Image: 8BitDo

It also features more durable Hall effect joysticks and shoulder buttons which should help prevent it from developing stick drift over time. But if you’re not planning to use it with the Analogue 3D (someday), the controller will potentially only be useful for playing classic N64 games through an emulator or the Nintendo Switch Online service but your GoldenEye 007 muscle memory may not perfectly transfer over to the updated button layout. Nintendo’s own wireless N64 controller is a more accurate reproduction, but you still need to be a Nintendo Switch Online subscriber to buy one.

Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.