The drive comes in a small blister pack. At the top left of the cardboard backing are icons for the various classes supported by the drive; SDXC I, V30, U3, C10 and A1. Top right is the capacity. At the top of the back of the card is a note about the 5-year warranty the drive is backed by. Under this is a line of icons about some of the drive's features; 4K recording support, waterproof, shockproof and that the drive supports Android. Under these are the speed ratings for the drive.
The card itself measures 15.0 x 11.0 x 1.0 mm, weighs 0.3g and is bundled with a LADP1 microSD adapter.
The card itself is pretty well protected. It is compatible with the IPX7 standard for waterproofing (withstand submerging in 1 meter of water for up to 30 minutes) and it can survive being dropped from up to 5 meters. It also has ESD Immunity (resistance to electrostatic discharge (ESD) from the human body) and is compliant with ISO7816-1 meaning it can still function after being subjected to 0.1 Gy of X-rays, i.e airport security X-ray checks.