Flexible: a PSP holder for everywhere
It looks a LOT like Talismoon‘s InTouch car cradle for the PSP, but has a promotional picture like the one for the stand that they sold with the release of the DS Cooking Navigator. It’s called Flexible, and it’s an all-around holder for your PSP.
It’s hard to find something new to say about Game Tex Japan’s Flexible PSP holder. That’s mostly because everything that could be said about this accessory has been said in other articles, but let’s try anyway. Featuring the same suction cup technology (boy, does that sound weird) as the InTouch, the Flexible is being marketed as a “stick-anywhere” device. We hope it means the suction cup for this one can really stick anywhere, or the sound of your PSP crashing onto the floor will be the last sound you ever hear from your handheld.
From the promotional pictures and tech specs of the Flexible (no specifications are available for the InTouch, it seems as if the arm for the Flexible is a bit shorter. On the other hand, the makers are saying that it can be turned 360 degrees. The pictures indicate that you can use it while lying down by attaching it to the your bed or sofa, or wrapping it in plastic to watch your favorite UMD while cleaning the dishes – it’s meant for far more versatility.
The only issue we have with that is the picture of the guy below who’s lying down, because there are two possibilities for this. Either he’s lying down under the table he’s attached the PSP to, or he’s playing it with his stomach facing down. Both positions aren’t things you’d do very often, but perhaps it’s a Japanese thing. The Flexible is available in Japan for Â¥ 1500 (US $ 13), so if you’ve always wanted some kind of Japanese trinket, you might as well get something you can use.
It looks a LOT like Talismoon‘s InTouch car cradle for the PSP, but has a promotional picture like the one for the stand that they sold with the release of the DS Cooking Navigator. It’s called Flexible, and it’s an all-around holder for your PSP.
It’s hard to find something new to say about Game Tex Japan’s Flexible PSP holder. That’s mostly because everything that could be said about this accessory has been said in other articles, but let’s try anyway. Featuring the same suction cup technology (boy, does that sound weird) as the InTouch, the Flexible is being marketed as a “stick-anywhere” device. We hope it means the suction cup for this one can really stick anywhere, or the sound of your PSP crashing onto the floor will be the last sound you ever hear from your handheld.
From the promotional pictures and tech specs of the Flexible (no specifications are available for the InTouch, it seems as if the arm for the Flexible is a bit shorter. On the other hand, the makers are saying that it can be turned 360 degrees. The pictures indicate that you can use it while lying down by attaching it to the your bed or sofa, or wrapping it in plastic to watch your favorite UMD while cleaning the dishes – it’s meant for far more versatility.
The only issue we have with that is the picture of the guy below who’s lying down, because there are two possibilities for this. Either he’s lying down under the table he’s attached the PSP to, or he’s playing it with his stomach facing down. Both positions aren’t things you’d do very often, but perhaps it’s a Japanese thing. The Flexible is available in Japan for Â¥ 1500 (US $ 13), so if you’ve always wanted some kind of Japanese trinket, you might as well get something you can use.