The Ouya has one of the sleeker designs of any console, hands down. No matter how sleek PS4 or Xbox One manages to be, it’s going to have a hard time fitting in the palm of your hand. The tiny box has the appearance and actual ease of something that you could throw into a purse and go to someone’s house with. 

The controller, however, is an interesting conundrum. 

If you’ve played with a third party controller in the last few years, you might understand the problem. A lot of the innards in a controller are evidently patented, so whenever you make a new controller you must either pay the piper or reinvent the wheel. Both options are less than ideal. While I love the Afterglow third party controller I bought for my PS3, it can’t compete with the PS3 Dualshock. 

Unfortunately, it sounds like that same problem is happening with the Ouya. 

The Ouya has a lot of similarities to a third party controller for a conventional console, in that it cut some corners due to patents that make it a bit more interesting to use.

Feel

The controller feels very solid and very smooth. Initially I was not impressed by the square shape and thought that it would be an odd fit for my hands. Personally, I’m very picky with controllers and my two favorites are the PS3 Dualshock 3 and the Gamecube Controller, two very small and precise feeling controllers. For its shape, the Ouya controller definitely brings to mind the Xbox 360, but is honestly less bulky than its Microsoft counterpart. 

The buttons all feel very right in their location, and the D-pad and sticks are in comfortable and easy to reach positions on the face of the controller itself. The triggers along the back are probably the most problematic feature of the controller. 

The triggers feel very cheap and flimsy. While there weren’t any problems in game with the triggers for the time that I used it, they feel rather insubstantial. With a controller that one of my fellow gamers called heavy, having these cheap plastic triggers was rather bizarre. 

Functionality

While using the controller, the OUYA buttons kept getting stuck. The console I was using was less than  a week old and barely used, so this seemed rather odd. The Microsoft controllers I have for my 360 still function rather well and they’re over two years old. That the Ouya buttons already seem sticky and well, broken is disappointing. 

Other writers have covered in far more detail the sensitivity of the analog stick, which is an experience I personally did not find offensive. That said, I use the analog stick on the PS3 and Xbox 360 like a battering ram and with subtlety of a pubescent teenager, so there’s reason to suspect it might not have been as delicate as some gamers like to have. 

Previous articles have mentioned a problem with controller lag, but that was not my experience at all. The Ouya allows for other controllers to be used, so the set-up we had was for two Ouya controllers and a wired Xbox 360 controllers, and no one felt like their controller had any lag. 

Price

The price is a huge sticking point.

It’s $50.

For the same price as a Dual Shock 3, you can buy an Ouya controller. It’s roughly half the price of the whole console. In fact, if you buy four controllers, you spent twice the amount on controllers that you would on the console. 

The thing is, the Ouya will accept a PS3 controller and an Xbox 360 controller, so there’s really no need to buy the Ouya controller outside of supporting the console. So if you already own a 360 or a PS3, then you should probably just use those controllers with your new Ouya console. With all the patents that the two companies hold on their controllers, they’re just better overall.