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PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox: One-minute review
It brings me no pleasure to find that the PowerA Fusion Pro Wireless Controller for Xbox is the most disappointing product I’ve tested in the brand’s catalog to date. PowerA is admittedly a brand I’ve had mixed feelings about in the past. Sometimes it provides real winners, like the PowerA Enhanced Wireless Controller, which I consider a solid alternative to the official Nintendo Switch Pro Controller. Other times it doesn’t quite hit the mark, like we’ve seen recently with the PowerA Advantage Switch 2 Wired Controller and indeed the Fusion Pro for Xbox here.
First and foremost, the best Xbox controllers should provide a satisfying play experience with minimal frustrations, but this PowerA pad is loaded with them. From its awkward d-pad and abrasive textured grips, to obnoxious Lumectra RGB lighting and trigger locks that simply don’t work most of the time, this is a controller that tries and fails to punch above its weight class with an absurdly high price tag to match.
It’s not all bad. You at least get a carry case and charging dock included in the box. Battery life is reasonably strong, and a neat audio switch lets you adjust headset volume or mute your mic in an instant. I also love PowerA’s quick-twist thumbsticks here, which provide three adjustable height levels. Plus, they’re Hall effect, meaning they’ll be able to resist stick drift much longer than traditional analog sticks. Still, these high points don’t do enough to outweigh the myriad frustrations I have with this controller.
PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox: Price and availability
- List price: $169.99 / £149.99 / AU$199.95
- Comparable in price to the Nacon Revolution X Unlimited and Razer Wolverine V3 Pro
- There are plenty of cheaper and better options available for Xbox and PC
I’d feel a bit more comfortable recommending the Fusion Pro for Xbox if it weren’t for that eye-watering price tag. At $169.99 / £149.99 / AU$199.95, it’s bordering on the premium territory of Xbox pads like the Nacon Revolution X Unlimited and Razer Wolverine V3 Pro.
If the Fusion Pro provided a stellar controller experience, the price would be an easier pill to swallow. The issue for PowerA is that there’s no shortage of superb Xbox and PC-compatible controllers like it that are available for less than half of its price, including the 8BitDo Ultimate 2, GameSir Kaleid, and even the official Xbox Wireless Controller.
PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox: Specs
Price |
$169.99 / £149.99 / AU$199.95 |
Weight |
1.44lbs / 0.65kg |
Dimensions |
6.1 x 4.2 x 2.4in / 156 x 107 x 61mm |
Compatibility |
Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, Xbox One, PC |
Connection type |
Wireless (2.4GHz), Wired (USB-C) |
Battery life |
Around 30 hours |
PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox: Design and features
The initial package out of the box is promising. The PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox comes with a carry case and bespoke charging dock, both incredibly useful accessories that I welcome with any gamepad. Both are solidly made, too. Especially the charging dock, which is well-built, unintrusive, and can sit in any gaming setup ready to charge your pad up via USB-C. The carry case, meanwhile, is sturdy and has a compartment for the USB-C cable.
The pad itself bears a striking resemblance to the official Xbox Wireless Controller, which certainly isn’t anomalous in the wider Xbox controller market. It does feel slightly weightier than Microsoft’s pad, owing to inclusions like trigger locks and a magnetic charging dock connector.
Carrying on with the good, the controller’s quick-twist thumbsticks are genuinely brilliant. Turning them clockwise raises the thumbstick shaft, while lowering it when turned counterclockwise. There are three height levels here, and I personally found the middle setting to be the most comfortable. They lock firmly in place after adjusting, too, so there’s no unnecessary fiddling.
Besides a handy headset audio adjustment switch, that’s about where my praise ends for the PowerA Fusion Pro. To that end, I simply could not get on with the abundance of RGB lighting here. By default, a bright rainbow effect coats the controller, revealing a preset tribal-esque silhouette. It’s a nice pattern, but I found it to be really distracting during play.
You can change the RGB pattern profile (or switch it off entirely) via a dedicated button on the rear of the controller. I opted to keep it switched off, as some of the other pulse-like patterns weren’t much better.
The overall feel of the controller leaves much to be desired, too. The textured grips feel just a little too rough on my hands, making for rather uncomfortable long play sessions. The d-pad is also fairly listless, feeling fine on one end while awkwardly spongy and hard to press on the other. Admittedly, this could be an issue with my unit specifically, but something to keep in mind if you’re planning on buying.
PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox: Performance
Despite my criticism, I can at least say the PowerA Fusion Pro does get the job done as a controller. If you can ignore the awkward d-pad and abrasive textured grips, performance is perfectly reasonable across the board.
A major gripe here, though, is that the 3-step trigger locks just don’t work. When set to the midpoint, you have to squeeze the triggers really quite hard to register the press. And on the most acute setting, the triggers stop working entirely.
This was the case across multiple games I tested with the controller, including Halo Infinite, Fortnite, and Final Fantasy 14 Online. I like a shallow trigger in games like these, as it lets me fire weapons (or access hotbars in the latter’s case) a good deal quicker, but I was unable to do this on the Fusion Pro.
On a more positive note, the Fusion Pro’s battery life exceeded my expectations, coming in at around 25-30 hours when used wirelessly via a 2.4GHz connection. I tested the controller over the course of a week, across both Xbox Series X Digital Edition and PC, and found I didn’t have to charge the controller until my very last few sessions with it. Impressive stuff, and beats many other Xbox controllers – both cheaper and pricier than this one – on battery life overall.
Should I buy the PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox?
Buy it if…
Don’t buy it if…
Also consider…
I’m being honest here; the PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox would be a hard sell at most price points. Consider these two excellent alternatives if you’re currently shopping for a new Xbox and/or PC gamepad.
Row 0 – Cell 0 |
PowerA Fusion Pro |
Nacon Revolution X Unlimited |
8BitDo Ultimate 2 |
Price |
$169.99 / £149.99 / AU$199.95 |
$199.99 / £179.99 (around AU$229) |
$59.99 / £49.99 (around AU$90) |
Weight |
1.44lbs / 0.65kg |
0.72lbs / 0.33kg |
0.54lbs / 0.25kg |
Dimensions |
6.1 x 4.2 x 2.4in / 156 x 107 x 61mm |
6.5 x 4.5 x 2.2in / 164 x 115 x 56mm |
5.7 x 4.1 x 2.4in / 147 x 103 x 61mm |
Compatibility |
Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, Xbox One, PC |
Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, Xbox One, PC |
Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, Xbox One, PC |
Connection type |
Wireless (2.4GHz), Wired (USB-C) |
Wireless (2.4Ghz, Bluetooth), Wired (USB-C) |
Wireless (2.4Ghz, Bluetooth), Wired (USB-C) |
Battery life |
Around 30 hours |
Around 10 hours |
10-15 hours |
How I tested the PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox
- Tested for one week
- Played several games across Xbox and PC
- Compared to competitors from Razer, Nacon, 8BitDo, and more
I used the PowerA Fusion Pro for Xbox for a week in order to write this review. During that time, I played a wide range of titles on Xbox Series X Digital Edition and PC, including Fortnite, Silent Hill f, Tekken 8, Hollow Knight: Silksong, and much more besides.
Given this controller’s high price point, I compared it directly to similarly priced Xbox gamepad competitors like the Razer Wolverine V3 Pro and Nacon Revolution X Unlimited. These pads are slightly pricier, but offer more satisfying play with better build quality and high-end features (not to mention trigger locks that actually work).
Even then, I found a lot more to love with cheaper controllers, including the GameSir Kaleid and 8BitDo Ultimate 2. Both offer sublime features like Hall effect or TMR thumbsticks, clicky microswitch-powered buttons, and a tasteful amount of RGB that isn’t overly distracting to the eye.
First reviewed October 2025