• @Zarxrax
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    181 year ago

    Ah yes, Nintendo does have a long tradition of making big announcements at Gamescom, after all.

    • @Fredselfish
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      11 year ago

      What have they announced in the past?

      • @messem10
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        141 year ago

        I believe it is sarcasm, but with the death of E3 anything is possible.

        That said, I’d say it is more likely to see Nintendo announce it at the Tokyo Game Show instead. (This would put it at late September, which is right around when the Switch was revealed back in 2016.)

  • @woelkchen
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    101 year ago

    startmenu.co.uk, the well-known reputable source for leaks from Japan and definitively not some random website making shit up to drive ad traffic…

  • McBinary
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    -41 year ago

    They need to chill on releasing new generation consoles for a while (All of them, not just Nintendo). Give the current generation time for the game devs to fully utilize them. This constant upgrade in hardware for consoles is getting rather tired.

    • @uberkalden
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      121 year ago

      We’re coming up on 7 years for the switch, and it wasn’t exactly powerful when it released. Seems reasonable for them to refresh

      • McBinary
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        01 year ago

        Sure, refresh the hardware I guess - Can we make the dang thing compatible with the games we already have at least?!

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          In what world would you expect it to NOT be compatible with Switch cartridges?

          • Game Boy, Color, Advance - backwards compatible
          • GameCube, Wii - backwards compatible
          • Wii - Wii U - backwards compatible
          • DS - DSi - 3DS - N3DS - backwards compatible

          For all their faults, Nintendo have been strong with backwards compatibility for 30+ years, the only exceptions being the SNES (NES backwards compatibility existed initially but was dropped), N64 (fucking complex custom architecture and final cart based console) and Virtual Boy (lol)

          This is 7 years now since the launch of the switch. That’s longer than the period between the NES western launch to the SNES 1985-1991, longer than SNES to the N64 (1991-1996), longer than the N64 to the GameCube (1996 - 2001), longer than GameCube to the Wii (2001 - 2006), Wii to Wii U ( 2006 to 2012) and Wii U to Switch (2012 - 2017)

          The ONLY exception being the OG Gameboy to GBC, 9 years.

          • LordWarfire
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            -11 year ago

            For their handhelds they have an excellent history of backwards compatibility - but for consoles it’s only the Wii generation where we saw it. People are nervous because Nintendo didn’t make the Switch backwards compatible and because it’s technically complex to make something backwards compatible with the nVidia hardware in the Switch.

            I really hope, and strongly think Nintendo SHOULD, make the Switch 2 backwards compatible but I won’t be surprised if it’s not.

              • LordWarfire
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                1 year ago

                I mean that since 1983 (I’ll be generous and exclude the Color TV-Game era) through seven console generations only the Wii and WiiU were backwards compatible with the previous console which covers 11 years. That’s 28.5% of consoles and 27.5% of years. Not great odds.

        • @QuaternionsRock
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          21 year ago

          I kinda doubt they wouldn’t, to be honest. Both the Wii and Wii U had one generation of backwards-compatibility. The Switch didn’t probably due to a combination of the form factor and the fact that nobody had Wii U games anyways. Also, the PS5 and Series X/S both have backwards-compatibility. There are issues with the classic console lifecycle, but this one has been solved for awhile now.