duncanmalashock

Yorkshire Tea is now selling branded Xbox and PS5 controllers for £150 and the designs are somethin

By Dr. Evelyn Reed | January 01, 0001 | 7 min read

Well, where to start? In the long list of bizarre product branding tie-ins there have been some notable releases that have made us shake our heads in disbelief, but this one may just take the dunked biscuit. Yorkshire Tea, maker of teabags and tea-related paraphernalia in the UK, has added two new additions to its online store and, I can't quite believe I'm typing this, but they're gaming controllers. Specifically, a PlayStation 5 controller and an Xbox model, both resplendent in honest-to-goodness Yorkshire Tea branding complete with a pastoral scene featuring a sheep.

According to the product page this association came about via a tweet (is that what we're still calling them these days?) from controller designer POPeART, who was keen to show off a design he'd been working on featuring Yorkshire Tea's branding. A few Zoom meetings later and here we are, gazing with wonder upon the end result.

While Yorkshire Tea jokingly make mention in the product listing of a "special [[link]] button that boils your kettle (not really)", the only difference between these controllers and their regular, non-tea related counterparts is the printing, which means that yes, both of them will work perfectly well on PC either via a wireless dongle or Bluetooth, depending on which you pick.

They're fully functional gaming devices, and [[link]] yet something deep inside me wonders how I've been able to play my games all these years with a controller that doesn't remind my British soul, by the power of suggestion alone, that I need a cup of tea at least once an hour. 

Perfect peripherals

(Image credit: Colorwave)

Best gaming mouse: the top rodents for gaming
Best gaming keyboard: your PC's best friend...
Best gaming headset: don't ignore in-game audio

Leaning into the gag, the company is keen to show off its gaming [[link]] terminology chops in the description text with plenty of references to looting, one-shotting, levels and more that come off less like a product description and more like your Dad throwing hand shapes as he talks about modern music and being down with da kidz. 

Regardless, the controller designs themselves are at the very least unique, so let us take it as a blessing that all they've chosen to modify here are the aesthetics and not the functional aspects of the devices themselves.

Other than that special button that boils your kettle. Genuinely good idea, that.

Time for a cuppa, dontcha' think?

Discussion (3)

CoinHunter706

Website layout is very clean, intuitive, and easy to navigate. I can quickly find my favorite games, access promotions, and check my account details without any confusion. It’s a pleasure to use.

TreasureFinder479

I won a small jackpot yesterday and it was really exciting! The thrill of winning real money keeps me coming back. The website feels fair, and payouts are processed promptly, which makes me trust the platform even more.

SpinMasterX159

Website layout is very clean, intuitive, and easy to navigate. I can quickly find my favorite games, access promotions, and check my account details without any confusion. It’s a pleasure to use.

Recommended Reading

No GTA 6 PC release date announced

Last week, we [[link]] speculated about whether or not Grand Theft Auto 6 will release on PC on the same day as consoles. Most of us predicted that Rockstar will once again wait a year or so after the console ...

Fellow Dragon Age fans, I need you to play Baldur's Gate 3 with me

Gather 'round, Dragon Age fans. Listen, I know that the big new RPG Baldur's [[link]] Gate 3 is showing up in all your spaces. You've seen video edits of its super horny companion characters on your FYP and th...

There's a change buried in Baldur's Gate 3's latest patch that makes it easier than ever to recruit

Deep in Baldur's Gate 3's mammoth patch notes for its fifth main update is a whammy of a line: "Minthara will still appear in Moonrise Towers if she was knocked out in Act [[link]] 1." That's right⁠, it's now ...