One reason that so many gamers appreciate the Nintendo Switch is that its Bluetooth technology easily hooks up and connects to nearby PCs. You can connect Switch Pro and Joycon controllers to your PC if you have them.
27.01.2024 - 05:49 / wccftech.com / Francesco De Meo / Nintendo
Finding a Nintendo Switch 2 in stores should be easy, compared to the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S consoles, as a huge amount of consoles should be produced during the first fiscal year of availability.
Providing an update on today's earlier report, which suggests the next console by Nintendo will be released later this year with an 8" LCD panel, Bloomberg's Takashi Mochizuki revealed on X/Twitter that, based on display shipment data, Nintendo should produce over 10 million units in the console's first fiscal year of availability. This, coupled with the fact that there are no chip shortages, should make it easier to find the console in stores. Additionally, an OLED version of the console could be coming, but definitely not at launch.
Despite the console being a really badly kept secret, the Nintendo Switch 2 has yet to be officially announced. The new console from the Japanese company is expected to be released later this year, and it should deliver smooth 1080p gameplay with ray tracing. Thanks to NVIDIA DLSS Ray Reconstruction support, the console will also offer the best ray tracing capabilities of any console currently on the market.
The Nintendo Switch 2 has yet to be officially unveiled. We will keep you updated on the console as soon as more come in on it, so stay tuned for all the latest news.
One reason that so many gamers appreciate the Nintendo Switch is that its Bluetooth technology easily hooks up and connects to nearby PCs. You can connect Switch Pro and Joycon controllers to your PC if you have them.
Ys X: Nordics, the tenth main entry in the long-running action role-playing game series by Falcom, is launching in North America and Europe later this year.
Nintendo Switch 2 will be backwards compatible.
Over recent months, there have been plenty of rumours regarding Nintendo’s next-gen console, and though plenty of potential details on its specs and hardware have leaked, one thing that there hasn’t quite been enough clarity on is whether the console will support backward compatibility with the Nintendo Switch’s library.
Rumours of Nintendo’s next console continue to gather pace by the day, and though the Japanese company itself has yet to say anything about the Switch’s successor in an official capacity, leaks continue to insist that the console is set to launch sometime in 2024.
A new report claims Nintendo Switch 2 is expected later this year and will feature a custom-made Nvidia chip.
The Nintendo Switch 2 (or whatever Nintendo chooses to call its next-gen consoles) has been in the rumour mill for several months now, and with the Switch approaching its seventh anniversary in less than a month’s time, speculation about when its successor will be announced are continuing to heat up. Now, thanks to prominent insider NateTheHate, we might have some more information on that.
Nintendo fans have a lot to be excited about with the latest development on the rumor mill.
Nintendo will reveal the successor to its popular Switch handheld, the Switch 2, in March 2024, if rumors are to be believed. The Japanese gaming giant's partners are already making moves in connection to the upcoming reveal, according to insider sources.
Nintendo recently shared their earnings for the third quarter of their 2024 fiscal year (which runs from April 1, 2023 to March 31, 2024) and, as we reported, it was a good three months for the company with the Switch inching closer to edging out the PS2 as the best-selling console ever. Overall, the first three quarters of FY2024 have set a record for the company, with them bringing in ¥408 billion (or about $2.8 billion). But what about what comes next?
A new report courtesy of Bloomberg (via IGN) indicates that the Nintendo Switch 2—the follow-up console to the incredibly popular Nintendo Switch—will feature an 8-inch LCD display. The report by Bloomberg cites Hiroshi Hayase—an analyst with Omdia specialising in the display market.
Details surrounding Nintendo's next piece of hardware have been few and far between, with only rumors, leaks, and the opinions of industry analysts to go off right now. We know that Nintendo probably won't rock the boat too much due to the overwhelming success of the Switch, and industry analysts have predicted that the console will most likely be an "iteration" rather than a drastic change in design.