Android 17’s cool new gaming trick is to turn your foldable into a Nintendo DS

Foldable phones have really matured in recent years, and my time with the Motorola Razr Fold really cemented that idea. Apart from the novelty of having a flexible screen, brands are baking in unique features that really take advantage of the foldable mechanism and laptop-like orientations.

Now, Android 17 might look past just productivity and offer a new way to experience video games. A sneak peek shared on Reddit by Mishaal Rahman shows a new foldable gaming mode. It is a platform feature coming with Android 17. Simply unfold your phone, launch a compatible game, and Android can split the screen into two halves. The top half runs the game itself, while the bottom half turns into a dedicated virtual gamepad. If this reminds you of old handheld gaming devices like the Nintendo DS, you’re spot on!

Mishaal Rahman (r/AndroidGaming)

How does the new controller work?

The virtual gamepad is designed to emulate physical controller inputs at the system level. So it should work with games that already offer controller support, without developers needing to build a custom touch layout from scratch. The current button setup includes a D-pad, left and right thumbsticks, A/B/X/Y buttons, L1/L2/L3, R1/R2/R3, and Start. Android 17 also includes a few customization options, including different twin-stick layouts, small/medium/large sizing, light and dark themes, and a toggle for haptic feedback.

The controller can also hide itself when not needed. If you connect a physical controller over Bluetooth or USB, the virtual gamepad is designed to disable automatically. Touch-only games can also continue using the full unfolded screen without forcing the controller layout.

Foldables are finally getting the gaming tweaks they deserve

Mishaal Rahman (r/AndroidGaming)

The catch is that games still need to be adaptive to properly use the 50/50 layout when the device is unfolded. Also, for now, users cannot adjust the game-to-controller split or make the controls transparent as an overlay, though device makers could add their own changes because the feature is part of AOSP.

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In other words, Samsung, Google, OnePlus, Honor, and other foldable makers could potentially tailor the experience to their own hardware. A Galaxy Z Fold, Pixel Fold, or other large-screen foldable could each treat the feature a little differently. This isn’t an immediate replacement to gaming enthusiasts that prefer a physical controller, but for many casual gaming sessions, it does add more convenience–and a hint of nostalgia.

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