The Switch’s online service will be available for free after launch. In rapid fire, Nintendo showed off third party games including: Neither will be available until later this year.Ī bunch of third-party games are coming to the platform too. Nintendo showed a new Mario- Super Mario Odyssey-and previewed Splatoon 2 for Switch. The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is a launch game.Īvailable the same day as the system, March 3, 2017.īut some other Nintendo favorites won’t be. That means players will be able to buy a game in, say, Europe then play it on a Switch purchased in the U.S. Nintendo, long known for its zealous pursuit of compartmentalizing global “regions,” is making the Nintendo Switch “in general” region-free. Individual L/R Joy-Con Controllers-$49.99Ĭrazy but true. Nintendo revealed a handful of prices for some of its official Switch accessories, including: A demanding title like the upcoming Zelda should drain the battery fully in about 3 hours. Nintendo says the Switch’s battery life lasts 2.5 to 6.5 hours (game depending), and you can play while charging the system with the USB connector. Switch’s battery life is comparable to the Nintendo 3DS’s. It has 32 GB of internal storage, Wi-Fi, a USB Type-C connector, and supports up to eight Nintendo Switch players (squaring off with discrete systems) in proximity to each other. Nintendo says the Switch screen is 6.2-inches, multitouch capacitive and runs at a resolution of up to 1280-by-720 pixels. The technical specifications we have officially so far are: The Pro controller, additional Joy-Cons, docks and other accessories will be available separately. And there will be two models at launch, one with gray Joy-Cons controllers, and another with one neon blue and one neon red controller. Out of the box, you get the Nintendo Switch Console, a left and right Joy-Con, Joy-Con wrist straps, the Joy-Con grip, the Nintendo Switch Dock, an HDMI cable and an AC adapter. But they also apparently have advanced internal “rumble” haptics, which Nintendo demonstrated by suggesting you’d be able to distinguish between the feel of ice tumbling in a glass (by shaking the Joy-Con), or the altogether different vibrations of someone pouring water into it. They also (as suspected) have gyroscopes and accelerometers, just like the Wii Remote. The Joy-Cons have all the standard gamepad features, including analog thumb sticks, face buttons (A, B, X, Y), left and right buttons, and a square button that’ll let you grab screenshots (and in the future, video) to share online. The Joy-Cons are basically next-gen Wii remotes.
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