this post was submitted on 15 Nov 2025
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The overwhelming ignorance of rechargeable NiMH AA batteries is completely unreasonable. It's so nice when my Xbox One controllers die to just simply swap batteries, and throw the existing batteries on the charger. That said, you're not alone with that ignorance, those massive packs of single use AAs at Costco must sell to someone.
Heck, the Xbox One and newer controllers have replaceable battery packs that charge using the controller's USB port. You don't even have to swap them. All the advantages of a built-in battery, but when they crap out, it's like $15 and 30 seconds of work to replace them.
Only for so long as the manufacturer makes them. AAs don't have that problem.
But then you can replace them with AAs, and all you lose is the USB recharging. Best of both worlds.
If AAs are also an option then I have not complaints about the system.
Or they could have included them with the controller at-cost instead of making us pay $15 to $30 (the official battery packs are $30) PER CONTROLLER - many of us have more than one.
Considering the price difference between an Xbox Series controller ($40 on frequent sales) and a DualSense (rarely below $70), maybe they did.
Let's compare against msrp please.
Why? The price you're actually going to pay is what matters. Though even if you insist on MSRP for some reason, the DualSense is $75 and the Xbox controller is $65, and you can get these for $25 MSRP ($18 actual) for two, making the Xbox controller barely more expensive if you have an even number of them.
If you compare the prices today, the Xbox controller is $50 compared to its $65 MSRP and the DualSense is $74 with a $75 MSRP, so you can get two battery packs and a controller and still pay $68, $6 less.
Classy, tfw when people who don't understand energy density and recharge cycle count, pitch in. Moar stuff, moar polution. Don't know how to lower the bar further on the point.
edit: love the US defaultism, I guess I shouldn't expect much...
We're talking about a controller here, not a smartphone. Rechargeable AAs are more than capable enough for these kind of devices. Not everything needs to have the energy density that Li-ion batteries provide.