Review cover R4s Dongle for Nintendo Switch (Hardware)
Official GBAtemp Review

Product Information:

R4 Team releases its latest product, the R4s Dongle for the Nintendo Switch

What's in the Box?!

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The R4s comes in your standard variety thin printed box and plastic tray, typical of almost every modchip or hacking device out there. The included Micro-USB cable is used to charge the battery contained inside the dongle, which forgoes the problematic capacitor style charging method of it's competitor in exchange for a larger package size. While extremely short, it's a decent gauge so data transfer and kinks in the cable shouldn't be an issue. The RCM Jig is also slightly larger than a typical jig, giving you a larger thumb tab for inserting and removal from the Joycon rail. Conveniently, a small loop in the thumb tab makes it easy for a nylon loop or small key ring to go through, which could then be attached to a carrying case so it's easier to keep track of.

The dongle itself is a bit on the chunky side, nearly half-again the size of the SX Pro. While the circuitry of the dongle could have been shrunken down, the size of the battery appears to have been the determining factor for the shell design. Since manufacturing a custom size battery would have driven costs up, it appears they've opted to just increase the overall size instead, which helps the end-user by keeping the cost around $20 USD. Since the device uses a traditional battery, you shouldn't need to pre-charge with the Switch before rebooting or swapping payloads (provided you charged it fully at some point in the past). This also means that if you travel with your Switch turned off before you leave, you won't need to find another device to pre-charge it, as is the case with the SX, when it comes time to power it up.

The product doesn't come with any payloads, and leaves the choice up to the end-user. Double pressing on the button while it is plugged into your PC will auto-mount a small storage partition where you can drop the proper configuration file for the payload you wish to boot. After copying the file, it will automatically disconnect the storage partition and configure the device so it is ready to use right away. While very simple to use, the manual and instructions are pretty abysmal, but luckily not to hard to figure out. Choosing a payload that allows you to boot other payloads off of your Switch's SD card will be key in ensuring you only have to set it up once.

Nerd Stuff

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The R4s can be squeezed into a game case, but since it's much larger than its counterpart, it leaves a bulge in the casing, which may be undesirable if you are trying to keep your cases pristine. Fitting it into a game card pouch slot is pretty much out of the question, leaving you only a few options with pre-existing carrying cases except to let it float around loose in the pouch. Anything with a netted pocket will come in handy for carrying the unit around.

The main circuit consists of a generic CPLD or MCU (probably MCU because of the onboard storage) and some simple voltage flow protection. The top of the CPLD/MCU has been "sanded" off, so without some research it's impossible to tell exactly what they are using. The button swaps the Micro-USB side from charge mode to MTP mode, the bottom of it houses the battery and its connection leads, and that's your lot.

At this point, I've personally ditched my SX Pro dongle in lieu of the R4s, pairing it with my SX OS license to make the perfect power couple. My advice to anyone interested in modifying their Switch who hasn't already would be to pick up the SX OS only and pair it with the R4s, which will give you the best of both worlds.

Manufacturer's Info

  • Works on any firmware from any region.
  • Fully updatable using simple drag-and-drop operation.
  • Easy to use.
  • Professional support team keeps software up-to-date for the best customer experience.
  • Supports third-party payloads
  • No license file
  • 1-year warranty

R4s Website:

http://www.r4i-sdhc.com/

Verdict

What We Liked ...
  • Easy to Use
  • Good Build Quality
  • Battery Powered
What We Didn't Like ...
  • Bulky
  • Poor Documentation
9.5
out of 10

Overall

At the time of writing, the R4s is going to be your best bet for on-the-go RCM boot methods. Pairing it with the SX OS will give you the premier Switch hacking and piracy experience (if you're into that kind of thing).
Coincidentally, I got mine in the mail as well. I mean for $20 its a great deal, but you usually get the same value if you were to buy a SX OS Pro bundle. The installation was pretty seamless since you were so kind to explain the double button press trick to mount the storage. The only thing that was a little confusing is the fact that you have to download the payload from their own site to work, so the official payload.bin from TXs site does not work or does anything for that matter.

But all in all its a pretty great device, by far the most user friendly and well made dongle I have seen by now, oh and the jig is pretty sweet too!
 
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Coincidentally, I got mine in the mail as well. I mean for $20 its a great deal, but you usually get the same value if you were to buy a SX OS Pro bundle. The installation was pretty seamless since you were so kind to explain the double button press trick to mount the storage. The only thing that was a little confusing is the fact that you have to download the payload from their own site to work, so the official payload.bin from TXs site does not work or does anything for that matter.

But all in all its a pretty great device, by far the most user friendly and well made dongle I have seen by now, oh and the jig is pretty sweet too!

The file you are dropping on the R4s only programs it to boot a payload off of your Switch SD card. It's not actually a bootable payload you are getting from R4 site, but basically a file that tells it what file name to look for while booting. You aren't supposed to put your SX or Rei bins on it, those stay on your Switch SD card.
 
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The file you are dropping on the R4s only programs it to boot a payload off of your Switch SD card. It's not actually a bootable payload you are getting from R4 site, but basically a file that tells it what file name to look for while booting. You aren't supposed to put your SX or Rei bins on it, those stay on your Switch SD card.

Strange, the only two files I have on my SD card regarding CFW are the boot.dat and the license thingy. No signs of anything .bin related. Im using the SX OS.
 
> The top of the CPLD/MCU has been "sanded" off, so without some research it's impossible to tell exactly what they are using.

Judging by the behavior reported (shorting reset twice for bootloader, being mounted as a storage device), size and pin count of the package (32pin TQSP), the MCU is likely an ATSAMD21E18 running UF2 bootloader, similar to most other payload injectors out there.
 
You can well tell this was thrown together, the soldering is really weak and tons of flex just thrown onto it.
 
You can well tell this was thrown together, the soldering is really weak and tons of flex just thrown onto it.
I noticed that too. The battery is also unnecessarily big tbh, they could easily go for something much smaller.
 
I noticed that too. The battery is also unnecessarily big tbh, they could easily go for something much smaller.

I'm guessing they probably got a really good deal for that particular battery in bulk which means more profits for them and lower cost for us... but also a bigger shell lol.
 
I get that this is a review but what I don't get is that ur pushing SXOS that much in this review. Especially this comment '' My advice to anyone interested in modifying their Switch who hasn't already would be to pick up the SX OS only and pair it with the R4s, which will give you the best of both worlds.'' or this '' Pairing it with the SX OS will give you the premier Switch hacking and piracy experience (if you're into that kind of thing). ''
 
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I get that this is a review but what I don't get is that ur pushing SXOS that much in this review. Especially this comment '' My advice to anyone interested in modifying their Switch who hasn't already would be to pick up the SX OS only and pair it with the R4s, which will give you the best of both worlds.'' or this '' Pairing it with the SX OS will give you the premier Switch hacking and piracy experience (if you're into that kind of thing). ''
Until the open source gives us XCI loading, it's not wrong. Argue Semantics all you want, we still don't have that feature and probably won't for one excuse or the other.
 
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Until the open source gives us XCI loading, it's not wrong. Argue Semantics all you want, we still don't have that feature and probably won't for one excuse or the other.
NSPs are objectively better than XCIs, and XCI installing and loading are being worked on. I tested something very promising today.
 
Until the open source gives us XCI loading, it's not wrong. Argue Semantics all you want, we still don't have that feature and probably won't for one excuse or the other.
It ain't a discussion about what is better but it is a review about the R4S dongle so I really don't get why the reviewer is pushing SXOS that much in his review instead of actually keeping it a neutral how a review should be about a certain product instead of commercializing another product secretly in your review. I'm not here to say wich is better or worse but t I just don't agree with the SXOS pushing in this review that the reviewer did multiple times.
 
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It ain't a discussion about what is better but it is a review about the R4S dongle so I really don't get why the reviewer is pushing SXOS that much in his review instead of actually keeping it a neutral how a review should be about a certain product instead of commercializing another product secretly in your review. I'm not here to say wich is better or worse but t I just don't agree with the SXOS pushing in this review that the reviewer did multiple times.

Without something to boot the R4s dongle is literally worthless. The best companion for it, at the moment, is SX OS. Public bins still need modification to allow piracy and for all around ease of use, SX is the best thing out there at the moment.
 
Without something to boot the R4s dongle is literally worthless. The best companion for it, at the moment, is SX OS.
Why not Atmosphere or ReiNX, or even RajNX? Those are free, unlike SXOS, and those don't steal from open source developers (most of which are big gbatemp members).

Why do you even have to mention any CFW on this article about hardware?

Why is a review talking about piracy (and even using the word piracy) on frontpage?
 
Without something to boot the R4s dongle is literally worthless. The best companion for it, at the moment, is SX OS. Public bins still need modification to allow piracy and for all around ease of use, SX is the best thing out there at the moment.
You could have said something like '' you can put any custom firmware of your choosing on the dongle '' Wich is neutral but instead ur kinda biased when it comes to CFW and are pushing that. I'm not saying the review is bad in any way whatsoever but I would have liked to see that part neutral instead of pushing SXOS that much. It's fine if that's your pick and i'm not here to discuss wich is better or worse but I just would have liked to see that part neutral
 
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You could have said something like '' you can put any custom firmware of your choosing on the dongle '' Wich is neutral but instead ur kinda biased when it comes to CFW and are pushing that. I'm not saying the review is bad in any way whatsoever but I would have liked to see that part neutral instead of pushing SXOS that much. It's fine if that's your pick and i'm not here to discuss wich is better or worse but I just would have liked to see that part neutral

I mentioned ReiNX and said you choose the payload you want to boot, recommending one that lets you boot to other payloads on startup for ease of use.

Why not Atmosphere or ReiNX, or even RajNX? Those are free, unlike SXOS, and those don't steal from open source developers (most of which are big gbatemp members).

Why do you even have to mention any CFW on this article about hardware?

Why is a review talking about piracy (and even using the word piracy) on frontpage?

Let's not kid ourselves into thinking this is used for anything but that :P The reviews on other hardware such as flash carts, things like the Retron, and lots of other things we review are all piracy devices hiding behind the cover of "emulation". Yet we still talk about the ROMs and software we run on them...
 
I mentioned ReiNX and said you choose the payload you want to boot, recommending one that lets you boot to other payloads on startup for ease of use.



Let's not kid ourselves into thinking this is used for anything but that :P The reviews on other hardware such as flash carts, things like the Retron, and lots of other things we review are all piracy devices hiding behind the cover of "emulation". Yet we still talk about the ROMs and software we run on them...
I've read it again and there's no mention of Reinx. it's mostly SXOS but anyway not gonna bitch anymore about the review. In all honesty I enjoyed reading the review and it is put well together. My opinion is just that I would like to have seen a more a neutral approach when it comes reviewing the dongle and cfw usage on the dongle itself. That's all
 
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I've read it again and there's no mention of Reinx. it's mostly SXOS but anyway not gonna bitch anymore about the review. In all honesty I enjoyed reading the review and it is put well together. My opinion is just that I would like to have seen a more a neutral approach when it comes reviewing the dongle and cfw usage on the dongle itself. That's all

Huh weird... it's definitely in my draft, I must have removed the section that had it x_x my bad.
 
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Great review. Thank you @SonyUSA for your time/$/effort.

My advice to anyone interested in modifying their Switch who hasn't already would be to pick up the SX OS only and pair it with the R4s, which will give you the best of both worlds.

Coming from a different angle than others....
SX OS $30 + R4 dongle $20 = $50
SX Pro = $40

Is the battery instead of caps really worth an extra $10 despite the increase in size? Or is there another pro over the SX dongle I missed?
 
Great review. Thank you @SonyUSA for your time/$/effort.



Coming from a different angle than others....
SX OS $30 + R4 dongle $20 = $50
SX Pro = $40

Is the battery instead of caps really worth an extra $10 despite the increase in size? Or is there another pro over the SX dongle I missed?

So, lots of people are having trouble with the caps on SX Pro, mine even started squealing which indicates poor quality and possible failure. On top of that, if you forget to plug in the dongle before you shut off or reboot your console, it wont boot the Switch until you plug it into something else to charge it (like a PC or laptop) since the charge on it only lasts a couple minutes. It makes it a great space saver, but just charging the battery ahead of time (standby time not withholding) seems more appealing to me than forgetting to pre-charge it before reboot and being stuck on the go with no way to power my switch back on.
 
So, lots of people are having trouble with the caps on SX Pro, mine even started squealing which indicates poor quality and possible failure. On top of that, if you forget to plug in the dongle before you shut off or reboot your console, it wont boot the Switch until you plug it into something else to charge it (like a PC or laptop) since the charge on it only lasts a couple minutes. It makes it a great space saver, but just charging the battery ahead of time (standby time not withholding) seems more appealing to me than forgetting to pre-charge it before reboot and being stuck on the go with no way to power my switch back on.

The charge on mine lasts at least a day (just tested), but I was not aware people were having issues with the caps failing; I'll have to bust out the soldering iron if that happens to me.
 
I know this is an old post but could you please OP, if you bother with dismantling the device, take the pictures of internals with something that isn't a potato.
Many of us are interested in what hardware is used and those pictures are so bad that you cant even see the markings.
I know you are doing this for free but it would be really awesome to have some better quality pictures :)
 
I know this is an old post but could you please OP, if you bother with dismantling the device, take the pictures of internals with something that isn't a potato.
Many of us are interested in what hardware is used and those pictures are so bad that you cant even see the markings.
I know you are doing this for free but it would be really awesome to have some better quality pictures :)

What do you mean? All the components with labels are perfectly readable. Also I took it with the Note 9 which has one of the best cameras on the market that isn't a real $800 camera xD

Oh btw: Click Thumbnail>Right Click Image>View Image>Click to Zoom In
That may help you ^
 
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What do you mean? All the components with labels are perfectly readable. Also I took it with the Note 9 which has one of the best cameras on the market that isn't a real $800 camera xD

Oh btw: Click Thumbnail>Right Click Image>View Image>Click to Zoom In
That may help you ^
Ok lets not rule out the possibility that Im going retard BUT I cannot see any markings on the main SoC whatsoever :o
 
You can see in my review where I mentioned that they sanded off the labels, making it impossible to identify >_>
God damn it, I seriously need glasses then. I read the whole thing (or so i thought) and didn't notice that.
I wonder why would they sandblast the labels.
Apologies for the wrong conclusions my dude.
 
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I have a quick question. What are some payloads that can load other payloads (like you mentioned in the review)? Also very good review!
 
Any payload! Rei for example... :)
You said this in your review: "Choosing a payload that allows you to boot other payloads off of your Switch's SD card will be key in ensuring you only have to set it up once". What is a payload that can do that
 
You said this in your review: "Choosing a payload that allows you to boot other payloads off of your Switch's SD card will be key in ensuring you only have to set it up once". What is a payload that can do that

SX OS. If you boot it while holding Volume key it takes you to a menu and you can boot any payload you want, that way you don't have to keep taking your SD card out or changing which payload to boot by hooking it to a PC. You can just use a quick boot device and have all your payloads accessible.
 
SX OS. If you boot it while holding Volume key it takes you to a menu and you can boot any payload you want, that way you don't have to keep taking your SD card out or changing which payload to boot by hooking it to a PC. You can just use a quick boot device and have all your payloads accessible.
Thanks :)
 
Is it possible to play online with the r4s and reinx? Or will i get banned?

You can for a little but then you will get banned lol. Though there are some changes with emunand now we may see some workarounds... stay tuned I guess.
 
Thanks to information found in this topic, I have written a basic usage manual for this device in 2023:



N4S Dongle
http://www.r4i-sdhc.com


// PACKAGE CONTENTS

1. N4S Dongle
2. USB to Micro-USB charge cable
3. Plastic JIG tool for right Joycon tray


// HOW IT WORKS


The main dongle consists of a micro-controlled unit (MCU) board powered by a internal rechargeable battery. It has an USB-C port (connection to Nintendo Switch console) an Micro-USB port (to charge the battery and transfer files with an PC), blue/red LEDs and a single button.

The dongle is capable of storage and execution of .UF2 files. Any payload must be previously converted to this file format. For convenience, the .UF2 file stored inside the dongle can be just a forwarder to a .BIN file (PAYLOAD.BIN) stored in the ROOT of console's Micro SD Card. Since new and updated payloads are released in .BIN files by default, this makes usage much easier.


// BASIC INSTRUCTIONS

To charge the battery, connect to a standard USB outlet (5V 0.5A) via Micro-USB. While charging, both blue and red LEDs will be lit. When the unit is fully charged, red LED will turn off and blue LED will stay lit.

To transfer files (.UF2 or other) to the dongle, connect to an PC USB port via Micro-USB and double press the dongle's button. It will enter MTD mode, and mount as an new drive named R4S on Windows. Drag and drop the files.


// NINTENDO SWITCH USAGE | BOOT CUSTOM FIRMWARE

1. Turn off your switch console. Hold power button until shutdown screen appear, select Power Off.
2. Remove the right Joycon from the Switch console and slide the JIG tool all the way down to the end.
3. Insert the R4S dongle into the USB-C port on the bottom of the Switch.
4. Hold the VOL + button and power button to turn on the Switch console.
5. The red LED on the dongle will turn on, and the system should boot into the custom firmware.
 
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