One of the biggest issues that’s plagued the Nintendo Switch since its launch in 2017 is stick drift. In fact, Nintendo faced several lawsuits as a result of the issue, with an ex-repair supervisor previously stating that the workload to fix drifting Joy-Con was “very stressful”.

Now, while we can acknowledge that Nintendo has undoubtedly been working hard behind the scenes to mitigate the issue for the upcoming Switch 2, we’re nevertheless disheartened to confirm that the Joy-Con 2’s joysticks will not be Hall Effect.

This comes via our interview with Nintendo of America’s Nate Bihldorff, who outright confirmed the exclusion. Notably, he didn’t specify whether or not the Pro Controller would include Hall Effect sticks, but the way in which he quickly deflects onto another topic probably implies that it won’t:

  • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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    7 days ago

    I feel like that with a lot of gaming, though. It feels like a lot of the industry has progressed where AAA gaming isn’t worth it while A and AA games are just as, if not more, entertaining.

    It feels more like Nintendo is building the engine for the next decade, but I’m still happy with last decade’s engine.

    • zeca@lemmy.eco.br
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      7 days ago

      seems to me like AAA games always were about demonstrating new game technologies, showcasing a new graphics engine or something, not about entertaining/fun games. Like that Crysis franchise from around 2010, everyone wanted to have a pc that could play crysis, but nobody actually wanted to play that game.

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        7 days ago

        AAA used to be about creating fun games. The Super Mario and Mario Kart games, for instance, are AAA games.

        It just happens to be that you can create a lot of complex and fun games today without pushing the edge of technology. That wasn’t always the case.