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by squigz 777 days ago
> It's either just going to be an even beefier Switch

This is exactly what it's going to be, though I have to ask how necessary that is.

I wonder if there's a name for this phenomenon - EA Sports Syndrome or something - where companies go from making good products every few years, to marginally changing the same product and releasing it every year.

4 comments

To be fair to Nintendo, they're very much still in the former category of making good products every few years. The switch was originally released 7 years ago, which is ancient in the world of consumer electronics.
While I don't fully disagree, I think Nintendo is slowly heading in that direction. I hope I'm wrong, as they're my favorite console company, and I'd hate to see them stop innovating and instead just release a slightly-beefier Switch for the next 5 years
Did you forget the Game Boy era or even the DS days where 3-7 models of each were released?
There’s 2 versions of the NES (plus two versions of the Famicom)

The SNES saw a smaller version released later

The Gameboy saw Pocket, Light, Color variants.

The GameBoy Advance had a flip model and a later variant with a better lit screen.

The Wii saw a few cost reduced models that lacked GameCube and WiFi.

The Wii U was released in two different versions with less storage on the white model.

The Switch has the Switch Lite and the newer OLED Switch.

The DS line had DS, DS Lite, DSi, 3DS, 2DS, 3DS XL, New 3DS, New 2DS and I think a New 3DS XL.

Plus they have partners who release console variants like the Sharp TV with built in console, the Sharp Famicom with built in disk drive, the GameCube that plays DVDs from Panasonic.

Nintendo releases a lot of versions of its systems.

Some of those devices you describe were different consoles and not just variants.

Gameboy color had games exclusive to it that wouldn't run in a gameboy, the DS/DSi/3ds were different consoles, even if few DSi exclusive games were released.

Yep, but part of the same line often and I’m sure I missed some devices out. The 64DD for example.

The point is that Nintendo has basically always done this.

Normal
It's been over 7 years since the Switch was released on March 3, 2017. It's absolutely amazing how much they were able to squeeze out of it through software ingenuity, but it's potential is maxed out now. There were certainly some gameplay/enjoyment tradeoffs that had to be made in Tears of the Kingdom. It's probably financially impractical to keep getting the parts to make the "old" Switch vs. refreshing the hardware.
Improving battery life, framerate, and rendering resolution (which is often below the panel's native 720p) is definitely welcome. Two-three hours is miserable compared to older Nintendo handhelds, and many titles routinely drop below 30 frames per second which is not very nice (and causes motion sickness for some people).
The Wii was two Gamecubes glued together and set records. It's a winning formula.
Did the Gamecube have motion controls?
I sure tried to use the control like one. It didn't work, but I believed.
I still believe leaning into a turn or trying to avoid an enemy absolutely helps. Thanks for the lesson, Grandma!
Does it count if you used a Game Boy Player to play Wario Ware Twisted or Yoshi Tispy Turvy?
Teenager me sure acted like the GameCube had motion controls