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Your controller may soon track your heart rate during intense matches

Anbernic’s latest gamepad adds onboard display and heart tracking

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Anbernic is a name usually whispered in reverence by retro handheld enthusiasts—the company that churns out Game Boy-style emulators faster than most of us can charge our batteries. But in a move that feels equal parts “genius” and “why though?”, they have just dropped the RG G01, a wireless controller that wants to know exactly how stressed you are while you play.

The headline feature here is undeniable: this gamepad has a built-in heart rate monitor

It sounds like something out of a sci-fi experiment or perhaps a rejected Wii peripheral from 2008, but the implementation is surprisingly slick. Sensors embedded directly into the grips track your pulse in real-time, beaming that data to a 2.5-inch IPS display smack in the middle of the controller. Anbernic says this is to “monitor your well-being during intense sessions,” which is a very polite way of saying it’s there to show you exactly when Elden Ring or Call of Duty causes your blood pressure to spike.

Honestly, the potential here is fascinating. Imagine playing a horror game where the controller vibrates harder as your real-life fear response kicks in, or a competitive shooter that warns you to take a breath because you’re tilting off the face of the earth. We don’t know if developers will actually use it for gameplay mechanics yet, but just having that data visible is a neat, albeit anxious, party trick.

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But look past the medical equipment for a second, and you’ll see that Anbernic is actually trying to build a serious “pro” controller here. They aren’t just slapping a gimmick on a cheap plastic shell. The G01 is packed with what they call “Purple Kirin” electro-inductive joysticks, which they claim are even more durable and precise than the Hall Effect sticks everyone loves these days.

It’s also checking all the boxes for the nerdy spec-hunters

A 1000Hz polling rate (so practically zero latency), mechanical tactile buttons, and dual-mode triggers that let you switch between a long pull for racing games and a short, clicky hair-trigger for shooters. Plus, that little screen isn’t just for your heartbeat—it lets you remap buttons and set macros on the fly without needing to install buggy software on your PC. That alone might make it worth the price of admission for tinkerers.

Speaking of price, we still don’t know what this thing will cost or exactly when it lands in stores. But as far as first attempts go, pivoting from “retro game boy clones” to “bio-feedback pro controller” is the kind of chaotic energy the gaming hardware space has been missing. Whether it becomes an essential tool for esports athletes or just a fun way to prove to your friends that FIFA is literally giving you a heart attack, the RG G01 is definitely one of the most interesting gadgets to keep an eye on this year.

Moinak Pal
Moinak Pal is has been working in the technology sector covering both consumer centric tech and automotive technology for the…
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