Nintendo, as a stick drift-enraged customer, could you please clarify something for me?
"Designed from the ground up" could mean ওa 🐷lot of things, Nintendo

As ingenious as the original Nintendo Switch's Joy-Con controllers are, they leave a lot to be desired in the endurance department. It's hard to come across a Switch owner who hasn't run into any stick drift issues or who hasn't had to replace at least one of their controllers. The 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Nintendo Switch 2 is s🐽aid to have bigger, redesigned thumbsticks, but I'm a little concerned Nintendo isn't being more explicitly clear with us.
The reason that some of the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best Nintendo Switch controllers have struggled with longevity through the years is that they use traditional thumbsticks with potentiometers inside them. These use tiny resistors to measure yo🍬ur inputs, and depending on how hard you are on your controllers, and the quality of the physical parts used, they can begin t𓆉o wear down over time. This causes less accurate input registration, and can even cause your controller to register a directional input without you touching it.
This is known as stick drift, and it's a controller plague that's been slowly but surely vaccinated in the last few years thanks to the arrival of Hall Sensor thumbstick modules. These use tiny electromagnets to measure your inputs instead, and since there aren't any physical resistors that wear down over time, stick drift can't happen. The good news is that these sensors, and even newer TMR modules, don't cost more than potentiometers do - and that can be seen by the sheer number of 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:best PC controller contenders that utiliꦓze them and ship for below $50.
Nintendo's hardware design lead, Tetsuya Sasaki has said "The new Joy-Con 2 controllers for the Nintendo Switch 2 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:have been really designed from the groun☂d up from scratch, and they hav🌱e been designed to have bigger movement and smoother movement". That s෴ure does sound promising, but what exactly does it mean?
Nintendo has a funny way of not adhering to terminology that the rest of the gaming industry uses. It's one of the company's quirks they're well known for at this point, but in instances like these, it's infuriating. You'd think that if Hall Sensor thumbsticks we💮re used in both the n🍷ew Joy-Cons or the updated Switch 2 Pro Controller, the brand would want to use that term to combat the PR crisis it's been in for the last five years. As a consumer, I wish Nintendo would reassure me that I won't run into the same problems this generation.
In , it doesn't mention anything about the type of thumbsticks found in its new controllerℱs but does use terms like "accelerometer" (used for motion controls). The fact Nintendo isn't explicitly saying that Switch 2 uses Hall Sensors reads as a sign to me that it hasn't actually strayed from the potentiometer problem.
For me, and I'm sure, a lot of gamers, that would be a big red flag, especially with a pair of Joy-Con 2 controllers costing $89.99 to replace. The cases of stick drift have been so prevalent with the Nintendo Switch that the manufacturer had to issue ඣwidespread replacements following the pandemic sales boom, and a slew of third-party competitors ended up swooping into thღe ecosystem to issue people the Hall Effect controllers they wanted.
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Speaking of which, we still don't have confirmation from Nintendo that those third-party controllers for Switch will work with Switch 2. The brand has , but there haꩵsn't been a single mention of third-party accessories - of which there are many.
We can s༒ee from a blanket statement from Nintendo that "your Switch controllers will work on Switch 2", but that doesn't tell the whole story. Wirelessly, the original Switch's Pro Controller can connect to your Switch 2, and the same goes fꦑor the original Joy-Con controllers. But since dimensions are different for the new platform, you won't be able to use the Joy-Cons on the sides of your Switch 2 or use the Joy-Con grip for the Switch 2.
Again, there are loads of third-party Switch gamepads in the wild, and while I don't really see any reason that these wouldn't be compatible with the new platform, it'd be nice to have that clearly stated before people shop for a 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Nintendo Switch 2 pre-order. That's doubly true if the company isn't going to reassure people that stic✨k drift won'🔯t be in play come June 5.