GameSir’s new Aimlabs-branded Xbox controller is a style-led release, not a faster sequel. The GameSir G7 Pro Aimlabs Edition (For Xbox) adds the teal identity of the aim-training platform to the existing G7 Pro tri-mode controller, while keeping the same core hardware as the standard model, according to Notebookcheck.
That distinction matters because GameSir materials also point to a separate G7 Pro 8K PC Aimlabs Edition and use the phrase “8K Hz Precision.” However, the supplied primary source for the new Xbox-supported Aimlabs model does not establish that product as an earlier release, frame it as a direct spec leap, or say the Xbox-supported version follows that playbook. This model reads closer to a special-edition skin over familiar G7 Pro internals.
GameSir G7 Pro Aimlabs Edition brings teal branding to the Xbox tri-mode controller
The strongest read is simple: GameSir is extending the Aimlabs collaboration to Xbox buyers without turning it into a new performance tier. The controller uses a black faceplate with a gradient teal finish at the bottom, translucent teal grips, translucent teal trigger buttons, and matching extra bumper buttons. The thumbsticks and D-pad stay black.
The package also includes a charging dock carrying the Aimlabs logo. Since this version supports Xbox consoles, the home button carries the Xbox logo. That makes the positioning clear: this is not simply the separately branded 8K PC Aimlabs controller repackaged for console players.
The counterpoint is that cosmetic editions can still matter. Controller buyers often choose based on feel, layout, and brand identity as much as raw specs, especially when the base hardware is already aimed at more demanding players. Here, the Aimlabs tie-in gives GameSir a way to speak directly to players who care about aim practice and competitive-style input control, without changing the device’s technical baseline.
What would weaken that read is evidence of hidden hardware changes, different switch behavior, a different battery, or altered latency claims. The supplied details do not show that. They point to the same G7 Pro feature set in a new visual treatment.
Aimlabs Edition keeps the same GameSir G7 Pro feature set as the standard model
The important buying detail is that the Xbox Aimlabs Edition matches the standard G7 Pro, rather than the separately described PC 8K Aimlabs version. The standard GameSir G7 Pro tri-mode controller is already available in six colors, and this release adds another design option tied to Aimlabs branding.
The controller supports wired connectivity on Xbox One and Xbox Series S|X. On PC, it supports both wired and 2.4GHz wireless use. On Android, it connects through Bluetooth. That tri-mode split is central to the G7 Pro pitch, but the console limitation remains: Xbox play is wired.
The feature list stays dense. The controller includes GameSir’s Mag-Res TMR sticks, Hall Effect Analog triggers with micro switch trigger stops, a six-axis gyroscope for PC only, optical micro switch ABXY buttons, a mechanical micro switch D-pad, four customizable buttons, four rumble motors, an audio jack, and a 1200mAh battery. It ships with extra D-pads, a USB cable, and a 2.4GHz dongle.
Users can customize the controller through GameSir Nexus, available on PC or Xbox through the Microsoft Store. That keeps the software path aligned with the standard G7 Pro rather than creating a separate Aimlabs-specific configuration track.
| Model | Platform focus | Polling-rate language | Main difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| G7 Pro 8K PC Aimlabs Edition | PC-focused | GameSir materials use “8K Hz Precision” | Separate Aimlabs-branded PC model |
| G7 Pro Aimlabs Edition (For Xbox) | Xbox, PC, Android | 1,000Hz when used with PC | Aimlabs-themed version of standard G7 Pro |
| Standard G7 Pro tri-mode | Xbox, PC, Android | 1,000Hz when used with PC | Same core feature set, multiple colors |
The strongest counterpoint is branding confusion. Two Aimlabs-branded G7 Pro controllers now exist, but the naming and platform language differ. Buyers should not assume the Xbox Aimlabs Edition inherits the “8K Hz Precision” claim used around the PC Aimlabs product.
Aimlabs branding gives GameSir a sharper identity without changing the controller’s job
The Aimlabs collaboration makes more sense as positioning than as engineering news. Aimlabs is an aim-training platform, and GameSir’s own product language around the PC Aimlabs model leans directly into that angle.
“Unleash Your Reflexes. 8K Hz Precision.”
That line applies to the G7 Pro 8K PC Aimlabs Edition in GameSir’s materials, not to the Xbox-supported Aimlabs controller. The distinction is useful because it shows how GameSir is using the same partner name across two different product pitches: one marketed with 8K PC language, the other around Xbox compatibility and the standard G7 Pro layout.
For readers tracking game-adjacent device releases, MLXIO has also covered shifts in the software side of play through Moving Ruptures Just Changed Diablo IV’s Season Grind and subscription catalog moves in Apple Arcade Drops 4 Games as Its $6.99 Bet Gets Bigger. This GameSir launch sits on the hardware side of that broader consumer decision: whether a new edition changes the experience, or mainly changes the object in your hands.
The practical answer here leans toward design preference. If a buyer was already considering the G7 Pro, the Aimlabs Edition offers a more distinctive look. If the buyer specifically wanted GameSir’s “8K Hz Precision” Aimlabs pitch, this Xbox version is not the same product.
Price and availability make the Xbox Aimlabs Edition a real purchase option now
This is not just an announcement with missing retail details. The GameSir G7 Pro Aimlabs Edition is available now on Amazon for $89.99 and from GameSir’s website, according to the source material.
That price and availability detail gives buyers a clean comparison point against other G7 Pro colorways and special editions. The supplied material does not confirm whether supply is limited, whether all regions will get the same access, or whether retailer bundles will vary. It also does not say that the Aimlabs Edition carries upgraded internals over the standard G7 Pro.
The near-term watch item is retail clarity. Buyers should check the exact listing name, platform support, and polling-rate language before ordering, because the G7 Pro 8K Aimlabs Edition and the G7 Pro Aimlabs Edition (For Xbox) are meaningfully different despite sharing the Aimlabs badge. For Xbox players who already wanted the G7 Pro’s tri-mode setup and prefer the teal Aimlabs treatment, this edition is the cleaner fit. For PC players chasing the 8K-branded PC pitch, the Xbox-supported version is the wrong shortcut.
Key Takeaways
- The Xbox Aimlabs Edition appears to be a cosmetic collaboration, not a major performance upgrade.
- Buyers should not assume the Xbox model has the same “8K Hz Precision” positioning as the separate PC Aimlabs version.
- The release gives competitive-minded Xbox players a branded option built around the existing G7 Pro hardware.









