Nintendo Reportedly Plans Smaller and Cheaper Switch For This Year (engadget.com) 96
According to a report from Nikkei, Nintendo is developing a smaller and cheaper version of the Switch focused on portability, and without some of the features in the original console. "A rumor in October suggested Nintendo was developing a new Switch, but instead of improving on the existing model, it's just as likely the company is looking for ways to streamline the system," notes Engadget. From the report: As Ars Technica speculates, the console's plastic dock could be the first thing to go. It's available separately for $90, and there are also cheaper ways to get your Switch to output to a TV (it's relying on a USB-C connection, after all). Nintendo could conceivably move towards a smaller and cheaper screen, and potentially even make the controller a physical part of the console, instead of the removable Joy-Cons. It also wouldn't be out of character for Nintendo to break existing functionality with a console revamp -- the 2DS was a cheaper spin on the 3DS that was still very playable without 3D.
Nickeling and Diming (Score:3, Insightful)
Looks like a way for Nintendo to actually increase profits :
The base "Switch Lite" will be cheaper, but :
- The whole raison d'être of the Nintendo Switch and its success is the ability to seamlessly switch from portable console on the move to big screen in your living room.
- So you'll buy a separate Nintendo-branded official dock (because their USB-C connector isn't 100% standard-compliant, and some of the cheap 3rd party accessory don't actually work perfectly).
- So you'll buy a separate controller for the big screen mode if the "Switch Lite" doesn't have detachable controller. (Other wise you'll have to use the whole console tethered to the big TV screen as a giant controller, in the style of SEGA Nomad). And you can bet that Nintendo will find a way to have you buy preferably Nintendo-branded joycons, instead of any random Bluetooth controller. (e.g.: the proprietary gyro and accelerometers and other extra that a joycon has in addition to any no-name asian bluetooth gamepad)
etc.
- Of course all of the above will come with an extra "Nintendo tax" in the price.
Because Shareholders/Profits/Why not.
(me ? sorry, but I'm already more than happy with my Pi).
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It may be the opposite. I was not expecting someone attacking an AC just because tells a guy he's not right.
You're either sarcastic or new lol
Re: Nickeling and Diming (Score:1)
False. I own literally every AAA system for the last 25 years. Nintendos entire approach is nothing like Sony or Microsoft. Quite the opposite has happened. Playstation move?
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Congratulations, you are not in the target market for the product.
The target audience being kids and nintendo fanboys. Oh wait here comes a new batch of the same games again.
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By what metric are they the top developer?
Repolishing the same decades old turd and sniffing used undergarment.
Credit where it's due they are the masters of that. EA look on in awe.
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> Oh wait here comes a new batch of the same games again.
Yeah, go back to PS and Xbone for the innovation of new franchises like Call of Duty, Battlefield, God of War, GTA, Assassin's Creed, and the NHL/NBA/Madden/NCAA/FIFA series. Sooo much more innovative and totally not at all reskins of previous annual releases...
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Everything else like having an hybrid portable plus TV system is just Nintendo advancing the console industry as they have always done.
Here, have something that's the worst of both worlds.
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lmao yeah that's why everybody's buying it and everybody's loving it. You retard.
So you don't have an underpowered console and oversized handheld?
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it's already an old nvidia shield tablet being sold with a smaller screen at twice the price.
Nintendo,the ultimate utter nickle and diming bastards, reselling the same shit over and over.
Don't forget their £80 packs of cardboard.
Re:Nickeling and Diming (Score:4, Funny)
The base "Switch Lite" ...
I think "Lite Switch" has a better ring to it.
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No, lets face it. The Switch was intended from the start to be Nintendo's way of gracefully exiting the console market while still saving face. The dock was always an afterthought. Nintendo gave up trying to keep up with Sony and MS a long time ago, and the Switch is just their transitional device. It was never intended as a successor to
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Yes, because the Switch's amazing 720p/1080p-on-a-good-day GPU, weak-as-fuck CPU, and online service that can't even match where Xbox Live was in 2002 are truly the envy of MS and Sony.
What color is the sky in your world?
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I like Nintendo. I have a Wii-U... However Nintendo has been lagging behind its competition for about 20 years.
The Nintendo Game Cube was the last product that was roughly on-par technically with its competitors.
I had to wait for the Wii-U to support 1080p graphics, while the PlayStation and Xbox had supported it for years.
Its 3d Graphical processing is behind even low end integrated PC graphics. Nintendo put all their R&D into 2dish graphics, which is great for the games that Nintendo likes to sell. C
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Saying that the PS3 and 360 supported 1080p is like saying the Switch supports 1080p. In a handful of games, maybe, but most PS3/360 games were closer to 720p, if not lower (Halo 3 ran at 640p, for example), and the first few revisions of the 360 didn't support 1080p output over anything but VGA. They were what the Wii U had to compete with for the first year of its life. Of course, even "720p-ish" graphics of the PS3 and 360 were a big step up over the Wii's notoriously soft 480p output. There's a reason w
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> No, lets face it. The Switch was intended from the start to be Nintendo's way of gracefully exiting the console market while still saving face
Oh this canard again? Normally the naysayers only throw out the "Nintendo's exiting the console market" phrase when their console sales are doing poorly, like in the Gamecube or Wii U days, instead of trying it when the latest console is on fire in the market.
Nintendo builds whatever makes the most money. Consoles sell, and Nintendo builds theirs (unlike Micros
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I don't think the Raspberry Pi has enough power to properly emulated Wii games, let along Wii U or Switch games.
If you are happy with your Pi then you are fine with the old nostalgic games. There is no problem with that. However, there is no point on ranting about the new systems either.
Re: Nickeling and Diming (Score:2)
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That Nintendo Switch Pro controller is so nice, Valve even added support for it to Steam.
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Except for the part where in the real world, barely anyone, ever, connects the Switch to a TV screen.
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In the real world, I haven't bought a switch, because I don't want to pay for a built-in screen that I won't use. I'm not alone.
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Because a touch screen and battery are not an insignificant part of the cost. The tablet/dock combo is too fragile and a console unit would be sturdier. Those are two really good reasons. That I don't usually buy a console in the $300+ range is another, but considering how underpowered it is, the first reason is probably a big part of the price tag.
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Interesting that you judge the cost / benefit ratio by the bill of materials vs the components you think are actually important.
What a retarded approach. Normal people would judge the cost / benefit as "Do I want to spend this money to play these games". What next, you won't buy a car with cup holders since you don't drink coffee on the go?
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Cars are a bad example. They usually offer a stripped down base model. Cup holders are not the thing, but a high end radio is an expense that you have the option to take away and pay less.
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The only statistics that I've seen show the split was roughly half of players using it primarily as a mobile console, and half of players using it primarily as a fixed console.
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The fact there's no way to disable charging while docked encourages a lot of battery conservationists to use it mobile just to not waste it.
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You mean "people who don't know how LiPo batteries work"?
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People who actually know how marketing lies work.
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Hi, I live in the real world, and 99% of my Switch gaming is done on my 58" TV. It's nice to take on the road on trips, but when I'm home it's parked in the dock for days.
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I've played my switch in mobile mode about 6 times, half of them were on my boat either in the marina or at anchor
The vast majority of the time spent playing the thing is playing mario kart with family on the big screen tv in the living room. In fact, other than Hollow Knight, the new Mario game an Civilization 6, they are all 4 player multiplayer games. I'm sure for the under-21 crowd who don't have their own room/tv the switch is probably played mostly mobile, but there's a significant number of a
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Except for the part where in the real world, barely anyone, ever, connects the Switch to a TV screen.
Errr You live in a different real world than the rest of the population clearly. Most Switches spend their home lives connected to the TV. Being portable is a bonus that many people ignore.
Now I truly admit there is a sense of irony that I wanted to play the Switch today, pulled out the controller, turned on the TV and ... damn the wife took it to work.
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Most of the recent console systems in memory have introduced a "half-generation" upgrade, which typically reduces costs, reduces the console size, and tweaked features and capabilities (sometimes improved, sometimes reduced). This has also been a typical pattern for Nintendo's handhelds as well. This new Switch seems to fall in line with this general trend.
In my recollection, console refreshes have been a good deal for the consumer, precisely the opposite of what you're suggesting, because they have to at
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The whole raison d'être of the Nintendo Switch and its success is the ability to seamlessly switch from portable console on the move to big screen in your living room.
No. The raison d'être of the Nintendo Switch is to play the latest Nintendo games. The fact that you can play them portably is a bonus.
Of course all of the above will come with an extra "Nintendo tax" in the price.
A tax worthy of paying for a decent and fun games library. Remember that word? Fun? You can keep your AAA garbage.
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Servicing batteries (Score:4, Informative)
They owe us one where the batteries can be replaced.
They owe you nothing. They are offering a product for sale. If you like it, buy it. If you don't, don't. Either choice is fine. I like user replaceable batteries too but I'm under no illusion that companies are under any obligation to provide them. I have declined to purchase products where I felt that servicing them would be a problem in the future. Nothing Nintendo makes is a life necessity so don't buy it if it doesn't meet your quality and durability standards.
Things like video game consoles are precisely the sort of thing where the government should be outlawing planned obsolescence in the form of non-fixable batteries.
"Planned obsolescence"? They don't have to plan it. It's going to be obsolete in 2-4 years with no planning whatsoever. That's just how fast the market moves. Now if your argument was that by making devices that cannot be serviced they are making unnecessary landfill then I think you might have a reasonable argument. Having a device fail because the battery went dead and cannot be replaced (by user or by manufacturer) is something that is a real problem.
"Send it in and we'll replace the battery or unit" should not be permissible on consumer electronics.
If you don't like it don't buy it. I think your complaint is a perfectly legitimate reason to not buy it. But if you fork over the cash for it then obviously it wasn't really a deal breaker for you now was it? I agree that the battery should be replaceable in some fashion but insisting that it be user serviceable is unreasonable for some products. If they provide a means to have it replaced by the manufacturer for some appropriate length of time (similar to automobile service parts) then that is fine. I can think of several products where having the General Public poking around inside to replace a battery is not the best idea. User serviceable is obviously ideal when possible but don't let perfect be the enemy of good.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Obsolete (Score:2)
I think if you look at the vast majority of people who play video games, nobody is throwing out games because they're four years old.
They might not throw them out but almost all of them sure as hell aren't playing them anymore. They are on to the next thing in most cases. Fortnite wasn't a thing 2 years ago and now every kid I know is playing it. Two years from now it will be something else. That's how it works and how is has worked for a long time. I was playing video games in the early 1980s and it was just as true then.
"Obsolete" doesn't mean "Can't run the latest stuff", it means "Is no longer useful".
Obsolete means many things and not being the current state of the art is definitely one of them. (that includes
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nobody is throwing out games because they're four years old.
You're right. They don't throw them out. They throw them in a drawer and let them get dusty. Back in the real world console[currentgen+1] has just been released, along with awesomegame[version+1]. Now watch your fun game sit at the loading screen endlessly with the text "Waiting for other players" flashing on the screen endlessly.
Just because you're still able to throw a disc in and turn it on doesn't make it any less obsolete.
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So change it yourself. It's technically user replaceable with a few screws and all that. Treat it as a IQ test. If you can figure it out, you can change the battery yourself. If you can't, you'r
New! Nintendo Switch (Score:1)
Smaller Node (Score:2)
I like how the 'cheaper option' linked has 24% 1-star reviews on Amazon. Probably not something you'd want to buy (main complaint is that it doesn't work).
I find it unlikely they wouldn't pack in a dock. For one thing, it being a console that can also be used as a portable is the chief gimmick, and not including a dock means it wouldn't be convertible out-of-the-box. Second, those docks are a hunk of molded plastic with a few standard USB ports and wires in it, which probably costs a buck tops to manufactur
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DS will phase out (Score:2)
This new Switch-Mini, with it's focus on portability, being smaller and easier to carry around, having build-in controllers etc. will probably replace the DS line.
What would be the point if keeping the DS around? The Switch-Mini will be more powerfull, more capable. It's only missing a second screen, but then again, it probably has 3x the resolution of a DS.
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Have to be able to remove joycons (Score:2)
There are many games that rely on the joycons as a pointer, being able to shake or manipulate them independently, or some games where you can only play holding them sideways. It wouldn't work if you can't remove them. Games like Mario Party, 1-2 Switch, Snipperclips, Just Dance, and more.
Hopefully if it is a more portable Switch they will add things like StreetPass, like they did on 3DS, to make it a fun portable experience.
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Yes but Nintendo's focus will be on "portability" and using the joycon as a pointer or playing games multiplayer is marginally useful in a portable way (IE using the built in display as a portable device). So Nintendo could embed just the physical controls on the device and make that static (like a 2DS did away with the hinges), and have an HDMI port in the back. If someone whats to play on a TV then they can use the device as a controller, plus link joy-cons to them for other players or games that absolu
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Few without kids understand! (Score:1)
This is pretty sweet news! This will probably be in time for Xmas or birthdays.
I have most of the good Wii U games for my kiddos, all bought used for about $15/each avg. Why buy a Wii U you ask? Let me repeat...$15/game vs $60/game. Most of the games are fun but only a few hours at best for the little ones. Nice thing is that I know they will come back and play them again when they are a little older.
For those of you without kids, it is tricky to navigate spending too much, spoiling, and the sheer number of
Look to the 3DS (Score:1)
while you're at it (Score:2)
If only SONY ... (Score:2)
Would finally realize, when looking at the SWITCH's success, how boneheaded it was to castrate the PS Vita by removing its ability to connect to a TV.
Its predecessor the PSP, for all its flaws as a disc-based portable console, could be connected to a TV.
You will never imagine how long I, incredulous, searched my VITA for the TV port and never found it.
Removing a basic feature so that they could force you to buy a second model of VITA, the VITA TV (but not portable).
Greed, greed and more greed.
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Smaller? How about a Switch XL (Score:2)
I like the switch, but never use the JoyCon controllers. The buttons are about half the size that they were on the Wii U. I understand wanting portability, but some of us bigger folks might like it too. I'd pay for bigger buttons on the joy cons.
Even smaller and even cheaper (Score:2)
New one is less powerful than a midrange cell phone?