Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
Heads up, this deal has expired. Want to create a deal alert for this item?
expired Posted by autosaver • Aug 10, 2022
expired Posted by autosaver • Aug 10, 2022

Insignia Play + Charge Kit for Xbox Series X | S (White)

+ Free Curbside Pickup

$10

$15

33% off
Best Buy
46 Comments 15,054 Views
Visit Best Buy
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Best Buy has Insignia Play + Charge Kit for Xbox Series X | S (White, NS-XBXS9PC) on sale for $9.99. Select free curbside pickup where stock permits, otherwise shipping is free on $35+.

Thanks to Community Member autosaver for finding this deal.
  • Note, pickup availability will vary by location.
Features:
  • Gaming Freedom
    • Play where you're most comfortable thanks to a generous 9' foot length
  • Save money and the environment
    • Rechargeable battery eliminates the need for disposable batteries
  • Powerful battery
    • 1200mAh battery pack lets you play longer between charges
  • 100% compatible with standard Xbox Series X | S controllers
    • Works with original Microsoft Xbox Series X | S wireless Controllers
  • Safe charging
    • Fully UL-certified battery cell
  • Cable not compatible with Xbox One controllers

Editor's Notes

Written by SubZero5 | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • This price is $5 lower (33.33% savings) than the list price of $15.
    • Matches previous FP deal.
  • About this product:
    • 1-Year Warranty
    • Rating of 4.6 from 100+ Best Buy customer reviews.
  • About this store:
    • Information about Best Buy returns can be found here.

Original Post

Written by autosaver
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Best Buy has Insignia Play + Charge Kit for Xbox Series X | S (White, NS-XBXS9PC) on sale for $9.99. Select free curbside pickup where stock permits, otherwise shipping is free on $35+.

Thanks to Community Member autosaver for finding this deal.
  • Note, pickup availability will vary by location.
Features:
  • Gaming Freedom
    • Play where you're most comfortable thanks to a generous 9' foot length
  • Save money and the environment
    • Rechargeable battery eliminates the need for disposable batteries
  • Powerful battery
    • 1200mAh battery pack lets you play longer between charges
  • 100% compatible with standard Xbox Series X | S controllers
    • Works with original Microsoft Xbox Series X | S wireless Controllers
  • Safe charging
    • Fully UL-certified battery cell
  • Cable not compatible with Xbox One controllers

Editor's Notes

Written by SubZero5 | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • This price is $5 lower (33.33% savings) than the list price of $15.
    • Matches previous FP deal.
  • About this product:
    • 1-Year Warranty
    • Rating of 4.6 from 100+ Best Buy customer reviews.
  • About this store:
    • Information about Best Buy returns can be found here.

Original Post

Written by autosaver

Community Voting

Deal Score
+27
Good Deal
Visit Best Buy

Price Intelligence

Model: Insignia™ - Play + Charge Kit for Xbox Series X | S - White

Deal History 

Sale Price
Slickdeal
  • $NaN
  • Today

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

HappyAccident
518 Posts
229 Reputation
Ok, it is important to learn the relationship between between:

Voltage: the ability for power to move
Amperage: the part of electricity that is called 'current'
Wattage: the total package we call 'power'

Think of voltage as a pipe with current as the water and wattage is work -- the work could be using the water to push something or to turn a water wheel to grind wheat into flour.

The equation to find power or wattage is volts multiplied by amps. Say you are in the US, so your wall outlets provide 120volts, and your circuit breaker will trip at 15amps. That means the maximum amount of power you can pull from that outlet before tripping the breaker is 15 * 120 = 1800watts. For reference, a decent sized microwave uses 1000watts, and the old energy-hogging lightbulbs use 100watts. A stovetop with all 4 of the burners on would use around 3200watts, which is why you can't plug it into a normal outlet.

With me so far? Good.

What is a mAh, then? Well, since electricity uses science units, the m is a metric m and stands for milli or 1/1000th of something, so 1mA is 0.001 amps. The h is for hours, because battery capacity is measured on a time scale.

To explain, say that you are hiring someone to help you move. You can ask them, 'how much weight can you lift at once'? That is kind of useful, because if they can't lift your heaviest thing they can't do the job. You ask them 'how far can you walk' with that thing? Also useful, since you need at least the heaviest thing moved a certain distance. Then ask 'can you move the combined weight of everything in that moving truck instantly?'. Nope.

What is more useful? 'How much stuff can you carry over a period of time over a certain distance before you are too tired to move anymore and need to sleep and eat before you can do it again'. This is why batteries are rated the way they are! If the moving guy does it quickly or slowly, the same amount of stuff gets moved the same distance before he needs a 'recharge'.

But, you are talking about watt-hours! What is going on? There are volts and amps! Yes, there are. Batteries are rated in amp-hours because battery voltage is (relatively) fixed. Just as your wall outlet stays 120V, a lithium-ion cell stays around 3.6V and a NiMH cell stays around 1.2V. So, voltage is a given with them and is not necessary to specify. 3.6V * XAh = 3.6 * X watt-hours.

What difference does this make?

Batteries are composed of 'cells' and can be arranged in series or parallel. They can combine volts or combine amps, the watts end up being the same total over time.

2 NiMH cells at 1.2V each at 1200mAh each in are run in series to get 2.4V for the Xbox controller. That is 2.4V * 1200mAh = 2880watt hours. The other pack linked earlier is 2600mAh (definitely not, that rating is surely exaggerated) with a 3.6V nominal rating (it is knocked down to 2.4V or so with a circuit inside the housing) is 3.6V * 2600 = 9360 watt-hours.

That is a HUGE difference? What gives? Aren't NiMH more energy dense than li-ions?

Yes. Two things:

the Insignia NiMH pack incorporates the charging circuit inside of it (the linked amazon one has a bulky charger you have to use with a separate power brick)
The linked amazon one is lying. The lithium cell in there is being rated at 2.4V or whatever not its 3.6V nominal. They have taken the amp hour rating voltage and make wattage then divided again to make amp hours again. 3.6 * X = Y watt-hours divided by 2.4 = amp-hours. To find out the original rating take the power in watt hours, at 2.4V which is 2.4 * 2600 = 6240 and divide by nominal li-ion voltage of 3.6 which is 1733Ah. That is what that battery would be rated as if it were sold as a lithium cell
Since they are giving you amp-hour ratings instead of watt-hours, they are hiding something -- that something is the power loss of the voltage conversion circuit inside of the pack. How much is lost here? No idea. If it was rated in watt-hours it would be at least a bit more honest though

Why care about this?


Rating batteries with different voltages or in different configurations in amp-hours is deceptive and useless
Batteries with voltage regulators inside of them will never give you the real battery capacity as rated by the naked cell inside of it if the ratings are in amp-hours
Battery brands almost always lie

If you care enough to compare the ratings of batteries, it is probably a good idea to understand battery technologies and ratings.

All that said, this battery pack is terrible. It is most likely two crappy regular NiMH cells inside with a simple dumb charger (or the xbox controller has a charger in? No idea) -- you are better off getting a GOOD smart charger and some enerloops or other low-self-discharge cells and swapping them yourself.

The lithium-ion pack with associated charger linked to is garbage and should not be trusted. Don't use crappy unknown lithium battery packs with weirdo proprietary chargers advertised with pictures made out of CGI. You will eventually end up burning your house down. Don't do it.

Yes, I know that maybe 2 people will read and care about this, and if so, then that's fine. Sorry about any typos. Corrections welcome from people who know what they are talking about and corrections not welcome from people who have to google in order to come up with them.
SeriesXM
720 Posts
110 Reputation
Man, you literally described the one thing I hate about my PS5 controller. As soon as it's dead, I have to grab another one because it's useless. Yet with my Xbox controller, I can swap in a fresh rechargeable battery while the old one charges back up.

Fewer options is never a good thing.
steigst
281 Posts
90 Reputation
To be fair, they provide options with traditional or rechargeable batteries. Pluses and minuses I guess.

Yes, it would be cool if they included a rechargable with the controllers.

45 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Aug 11, 2022
1,016 Posts
Joined Jul 2011
Aug 11, 2022
shoulda2
Aug 11, 2022
1,016 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank shoulda2

Quote from riopower :
I don't get it. If you have more than 2 controller it is easier to just grab another controller and put dead one on charger and keep going. It is more hassle to take out batteries and put new one and put dead ones in charger. If you have only one controller it is whole different story and rather have swappable batteries though.
You are saying that you need n+1 controllers lol.. I travel with my gaming laptop often and it's way less space needed for an extra set of aa rechargable batteries than a second controller.
1
Aug 11, 2022
626 Posts
Joined Aug 2015
Aug 11, 2022
riopower
Aug 11, 2022
626 Posts
Quote from petrieslastword :
How is that easier? Both things take literally the same amount of time.
Ok I have ps5 controllers and xbox series controllers. When my ps5 controller goes low battery I put plug usb cable and grab another one and turn it on which takes like 5-10 sec. On the other hand For my xbox controllers that using batteries, I have to open the back- take out the batteries -take out charged batteries from charger- put new one in controller -close the back- put used batteries in the charging blocks. This takes more than just what I do for ps5. Seriously I don't really bothered by either controlers as I enjoy both of them but there is sure difference in convinience. Plus it is just impossible to get regit rechargible batteries compatible with good charging dock for xbox controllers as market is swormed by cheap chinese craps. I ended up just buying new AA batteries from Costco to keep my xbox controller up.
1
Aug 11, 2022
626 Posts
Joined Aug 2015
Aug 11, 2022
riopower
Aug 11, 2022
626 Posts
Quote from shoulda2 :
You are saying that you need n+1 controllers lol.. I travel with my gaming laptop often and it's way less space needed for an extra set of aa rechargable batteries than a second controller.
I said in case of you only have one controller it is totally different story. Yes I would rather to have swappable batter to keep playing game if I only have one controller too.
Aug 11, 2022
626 Posts
Joined Aug 2015
Aug 11, 2022
riopower
Aug 11, 2022
626 Posts
Quote from SeriesXM :
Man, you literally described the one thing I hate about my PS5 controller. As soon as it's dead, I have to grab another one because it's useless. Yet with my Xbox controller, I can swap in a fresh rechargeable battery while the old one charges back up.

Fewer options is never a good thing.
I guess I miss understood the meaning of dead? I thought dead meant discharged battery. In this context I am 100% agreed on going swappable batteries.
Aug 11, 2022
237 Posts
Joined Aug 2020
Aug 11, 2022
SloppyBuckS
Aug 11, 2022
237 Posts
Quote from tonkotsu :
Can these be charged by plugging the controller into a charger like the insignia?
Yeah, I just tried it and it works
1
Aug 11, 2022
720 Posts
Joined Jan 2005
Aug 11, 2022
SeriesXM
Aug 11, 2022
720 Posts
Quote from riopower :
I guess I miss understood the meaning of dead? I thought dead meant discharged battery. In this context I am 100% agreed on going swappable batteries.
Ah yes, that is what I meant... a discharged battery. But you just made me realize that "dead" could also refer to a battery that can no longer hold a charge, in which case, my reply would be even more true. In that scenario, I'd have to purchase an entirely new controller as opposed to just a new battery.
Aug 11, 2022
237 Posts
Joined Aug 2020
Aug 11, 2022
SloppyBuckS
Aug 11, 2022
237 Posts
Quote from SloppyBuckS :
Amazon has two with a charger for $15

Ponkor Rechargeable Battery Packs for Xbox Series X|S/Xbox One, 2x2600mAh Batteries with High-Speed Charging Station for Xbox One S/Xbox One X/Xbox One Elite Wireless Controller https://a.co/d/h8rJrqW
Don't know why this got so many downvoted when the batteries on Amazon are 2,600 mah, there's two, and USB A to USB-c charges the battery just as these insignia does. Not too many bright people on here I see
3

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Aug 11, 2022
100 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
Aug 11, 2022
madpappi
Aug 11, 2022
100 Posts
Quote from riopower :
Ok I have ps5 controllers and xbox series controllers. When my ps5 controller goes low battery I put plug usb cable and grab another one and turn it on which takes like 5-10 sec. On the other hand For my xbox controllers that using batteries, I have to open the back- take out the batteries -take out charged batteries from charger- put new one in controller -close the back- put used batteries in the charging blocks. This takes more than just what I do for ps5. Seriously I don't really bothered by either controlers as I enjoy both of them but there is sure difference in convinience. Plus it is just impossible to get regit rechargible batteries compatible with good charging dock for xbox controllers as market is swormed by cheap chinese craps. I ended up just buying new AA batteries from Costco to keep my xbox controller up.
and what do you do for the games that register the second controller as player two ? i myself just swap the old batts and poof
Aug 11, 2022
91 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
Aug 11, 2022
Bodhi_Kamikaze
Aug 11, 2022
91 Posts
A charging dock for the dualsense has made the battery issue non existent for me. I don't play long enough from a full charge to run low and i set it on the dock after a session. Never empty.
Aug 11, 2022
83 Posts
Joined Feb 2014
Aug 11, 2022
StephenH5221
Aug 11, 2022
83 Posts
My controller has a micro USB port. Can that charge the lithium rechargeable batteries I use?
Aug 11, 2022
1,594 Posts
Joined Aug 2008
Aug 11, 2022
edxmon
Aug 11, 2022
1,594 Posts
Quote from StephenH5221 :
My controller has a micro USB port. Can that charge the lithium rechargeable batteries I use?
Yes. I have these batteries and I used them on my controller with micro-USB
Aug 11, 2022
2,127 Posts
Joined Jan 2013
Aug 11, 2022
tonkotsu
Aug 11, 2022
2,127 Posts
Quote from SloppyBuckS :
Yeah, I just tried it and it works
The one you linked doesn't have the extra middle prong on the battery pack that connects to the extra connector inside the controller like the insignia and official Xbox battery pack

how can it charge and play at the same time without that extra piece?
Aug 11, 2022
518 Posts
Joined Feb 2021
Aug 11, 2022
HappyAccident
Aug 11, 2022
518 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank HappyAccident

Quote from spydersdeals69 :
1200 mAh.

Garbage.
Ok, it is important to learn the relationship between between:
  • Voltage: the ability for power to move
  • Amperage: the part of electricity that is called 'current'
  • Wattage: the total package we call 'power'
Think of voltage as a pipe with current as the water and wattage is work -- the work could be using the water to push something or to turn a water wheel to grind wheat into flour.

The equation to find power or wattage is volts multiplied by amps. Say you are in the US, so your wall outlets provide 120volts, and your circuit breaker will trip at 15amps. That means the maximum amount of power you can pull from that outlet before tripping the breaker is 15 * 120 = 1800watts. For reference, a decent sized microwave uses 1000watts, and the old energy-hogging lightbulbs use 100watts. A stovetop with all 4 of the burners on would use around 3200watts, which is why you can't plug it into a normal outlet.

With me so far? Good.

What is a mAh, then? Well, since electricity uses science units, the m is a metric m and stands for milli or 1/1000th of something, so 1mA is 0.001 amps. The h is for hours, because battery capacity is measured on a time scale.

To explain, say that you are hiring someone to help you move. You can ask them, 'how much weight can you lift at once'? That is kind of useful, because if they can't lift your heaviest thing they can't do the job. You ask them 'how far can you walk' with that thing? Also useful, since you need at least the heaviest thing moved a certain distance. Then ask 'can you move the combined weight of everything in that moving truck instantly?'. Nope.

What is more useful? 'How much stuff can you carry over a period of time over a certain distance before you are too tired to move anymore and need to sleep and eat before you can do it again'. This is why batteries are rated the way they are! If the moving guy does it quickly or slowly, the same amount of stuff gets moved the same distance before he needs a 'recharge'.

But, you are talking about watt-hours! What is going on? There are volts and amps! Yes, there are. Batteries are rated in amp-hours because battery voltage is (relatively) fixed. Just as your wall outlet stays 120V, a lithium-ion cell stays around 3.6V and a NiMH cell stays around 1.2V. So, voltage is a given with them and is not necessary to specify. 3.6V * XAh = 3.6 * X watt-hours.

What difference does this make?

Batteries are composed of 'cells' and can be arranged in series or parallel. They can combine volts or combine amps, the watts end up being the same total over time.

2 NiMH cells at 1.2V each at 1200mAh each in are run in series to get 2.4V for the Xbox controller. That is 2.4V * 1200mAh = 2880watt hours. The other pack linked earlier is 2600mAh (definitely not, that rating is surely exaggerated) with a 3.6V nominal rating (it is knocked down to 2.4V or so with a circuit inside the housing) is 3.6V * 2600 = 9360 watt-hours.

That is a HUGE difference? What gives? Aren't NiMH more energy dense than li-ions?

Yes. Two things:
  1. the Insignia NiMH pack incorporates the charging circuit inside of it (the linked amazon one has a bulky charger you have to use with a separate power brick)
  2. The linked amazon one is lying. The lithium cell in there is being rated at 2.4V or whatever not its 3.6V nominal. They have taken the amp hour rating voltage and make wattage then divided again to make amp hours again. 3.6 * X = Y watt-hours divided by 2.4 = amp-hours. To find out the original rating take the power in watt hours, at 2.4V which is 2.4 * 2600 = 6240 and divide by nominal li-ion voltage of 3.6 which is 1733Ah. That is what that battery would be rated as if it were sold as a lithium cell
  3. Since they are giving you amp-hour ratings instead of watt-hours, they are hiding something -- that something is the power loss of the voltage conversion circuit inside of the pack. How much is lost here? No idea. If it was rated in watt-hours it would be at least a bit more honest though
Why care about this?
  • Rating batteries with different voltages or in different configurations in amp-hours is deceptive and useless
  • Batteries with voltage regulators inside of them will never give you the real battery capacity as rated by the naked cell inside of it if the ratings are in amp-hours
  • Battery brands almost always lie
If you care enough to compare the ratings of batteries, it is probably a good idea to understand battery technologies and ratings.

All that said, this battery pack is terrible. It is most likely two crappy regular NiMH cells inside with a simple dumb charger (or the xbox controller has a charger in? No idea) -- you are better off getting a GOOD smart charger and some enerloops or other low-self-discharge cells and swapping them yourself.

The lithium-ion pack with associated charger linked to is garbage and should not be trusted. Don't use crappy unknown lithium battery packs with weirdo proprietary chargers advertised with pictures made out of CGI. You will eventually end up burning your house down. Don't do it.

Yes, I know that maybe 2 people will read and care about this, and if so, then that's fine. Sorry about any typos. Corrections welcome from people who know what they are talking about and corrections not welcome from people who have to google in order to come up with them.
Last edited by HappyAccident August 11, 2022 at 12:45 AM.
3
Aug 11, 2022
20 Posts
Joined Oct 2020
Aug 11, 2022
lxelAlexl
Aug 11, 2022
20 Posts
Got one of these last time they were on sale in January for 9.99. I don't notice any difference when compared to the official Xbox Play/Charge. I'd personally recommend the 2 year warranty for 6.99. Once it wears out you can trade it in for a new one

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Aug 11, 2022
599 Posts
Joined Feb 2009
Aug 11, 2022
bucklen62189
Aug 11, 2022
599 Posts
Quote from SloppyBuckS :
Amazon has two with a charger for $15

Ponkor Rechargeable Battery Packs for Xbox Series X|S/Xbox One, 2x2600mAh Batteries with High-Speed Charging Station for Xbox One S/Xbox One X/Xbox One Elite Wireless Controller https://a.co/d/h8rJrqW
Doesn't include the 9ft USB-C cable.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

View All

Trending Deals

View All