https://www.mobapad.com/products/mobapad-m6-hd
And, by god, for the first time I think we've found an amenable solution. I'll do my best to eschew my native prolixity to give you a simple rundown, with some added details in spoiler tags.
Overview
The main thing is: you can comfortably play TATE STGs with your flipgrip with these things. That's the major revelation here, and for that alone it's a recommend from me.
The D-Pad on this thing is actually solid. They use a pretty soft feeling set of microswitches. Tap-dodging feels great, as does steering. I might say that the microswitches might almost be a touch soft for my taste. I think I'd still give my preference to the membrane D-Pad of Hori's Split Pad, but that might only be because I've grown very accustomed to it in the past three years. Regardless, compared to any other wireless option, it's an enormous, enormous improvement.
Spoiler
Spoiler
They're a touch bulky for my taste. Think something along the lines of the OG Split Pad.
When I play horizontal shooters, I prefer the SplitPad on the lefthand side of my Switch and a stock Nintendo joycon attached to the righthand side. Ergonomics or whatever. I tried doing something similar with the Mobipads (Mobypad on left, Joycon on right), but it seemed to cause compatibility issues. Not sure why, but worth noting.
Unknowns
I've had these things for only a few days, so lots I still don't know. Will they be durable? How will the microswitches wear? How much latency is introduced when they're being used wirelessly? I have no clue. Hoping someone more technically inclined might be curious enough to pick these up and measure the latter. They feel fine though.
It would have been really fucking nice to have these in 2020. I hardly play on my Switch at all anymore, but I'm am glad that a solution finally made its way to market. If anyone else picks these up, post impressions.