The OnePlus Ace 6 Ultra Finally Fixes the Thumbs-on-Screen Problem

Mobile gaming has come a long way from simple puzzle games and endless runners. Today’s smartphones can run graphically demanding titles at high frame rates, rivaling dedicated gaming hardware in raw power. But the way we actually control these games hasn’t kept pace. Playing shooters on a touchscreen has always meant thumbs blocking the very action they’re trying to aim at.

Gaming phones like the OnePlus Ace series have tried to bridge that gap with cutting-edge chips, cooling systems, and specialized gaming software. These upgrades help, but they don’t solve the fundamental issue of using glass as a controller. The Ace 6 Ultra changes that approach entirely by pairing with a snap-on accessory called the Gun God Game Controller, designed specifically for competitive shooter titles.

Designer: OnePlus

OnePlus calls the combined setup the “Gun God Handheld,” a new category somewhere between a smartphone and a portable gaming console. The controller is a lightweight shell that the phone snaps into, giving the whole rig a contoured, comfortable grip built for extended sessions. The multi-finger controls relocate to the back, clearing the screen and keeping the player’s field of view unobstructed.

That involves four physical back buttons: two bumpers (L1 and R1) and two triggers (L2 and R2). The thumbs stay on the screen for movement and aiming, while extra fingers take over shooting and special moves. All four are fully customizable, and OnePlus describes this as a “Touch × Button Fusion” that preserves the game’s native touchscreen logic while layering physical input on top.

What sets those buttons apart is what’s inside them. The micro-mechanical switches have a 1,000Hz polling rate and a 1.8ms response time, which means the gap between pressing a trigger and registering the action is almost imperceptible. A built-in esports antenna helps maintain a stable signal during play, which matters when a moment of lost connection is enough to throw off a well-timed shot.

Long gaming sessions bring heat, and the controller doesn’t ignore that. It includes a built-in heat spreader along with a magnetic suction cooling fan for sustained thermal performance. A USB-C port along the bottom keeps charging available while playing, so the battery isn’t a concern mid-session. Together, these let you push through long sessions without the heat-related slowdowns that typically creep in on demanding mobile titles.

Backing all of this is the OnePlus Ace 6 Ultra itself, which runs on a MediaTek Dimensity 9500 chipset. Its GPU is 33% faster than the previous generation, with 120 FPS gameplay support and ray tracing for a more visually immersive experience. An 8,600mAh battery with 120W fast charging handles the power demands, ensuring the phone itself keeps up with the hardware strapped to its back.

The Gun God Controller and Ace 6 Ultra launch together in China on April 28, with no confirmed global release date. For mobile gamers who’ve long wished their phone felt more like a proper handheld, this combo is a genuinely interesting answer. It’s still a phone when you need it to be, and something far more deliberate when the game demands it.

The post The OnePlus Ace 6 Ultra Finally Fixes the Thumbs-on-Screen Problem first appeared on Yanko Design.

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