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Nintendo is finally about to launch its online service for the Switch, and guess what? It's weird. I know, it's shocking. This from the company that brought us a chat feature that somehow requires the use of a smartphone and dongle setup that should draw the ships to the deepest. Two Nintendo-style problems: the first is that it will delete backups from your cloud if your subscription ends intentionally or accidentally, which seems simply vindictive. It also allows you to use only the NES games provided if you log once a week, because Nintendo is now interested in some sort of absurd pantomime of the bad decisions that have lost the Xbox One generation of this console. It feels like living on a planet other than Xbox Live Gold or PS +, even if it does it for a third of the price at $ 20 a year.
We do not care? I will buy it, and you will too. It allows you to play online games and use cloud backups in case you lose your device. As a bonus, it comes with some classic NES games. Done, prints, continues.
Here's the thing: the switch has no competition, in two ways. First of all, there is no competition because it's the only current Nintendo console (the 3DS gets quickly inherited), and that means it's the only console that play Mario Kart. You could say that it did not help much with the Wii U, but I would say that the remarkable thing about the Wii U was not how bad it was sold, but the fact that it was not really good. she was sold. And the reason was that there was no competition.
The Switch also has no competition in its basic format: it's a hybrid home / laptop console, and no one else is doing it. No one else makes a laptop this way either, and its only real competition is that of the smartphones we carry all in our pocket. And if the Switch does something, it reminds us that these smartphones are not yet a real competition for a device like this one.
And all of this shows why the switch will continue to work well, and in this context, the online service will go very well too. I love my Switch, even if it means dealing with some old-fashioned Nintendo strangeness. And I like online games almost as much as I like cloud backups. And so I will buy the online service not by desire but out of necessity, as will millions of others.
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Nintendo is finally about to launch its online service for the Switch, and guess what? It's weird. I know, it's shocking. This from the company that brought us a chat feature that somehow requires the use of a smartphone and dongle setup that should draw the ships to the deepest. Two Nintendo-style problems: the first is that it will delete backups from your cloud if your subscription ends intentionally or accidentally, which seems simply vindictive. It also allows you to use only the NES games provided if you log once a week, because Nintendo is now interested in some sort of absurd pantomime of the bad decisions that have lost the Xbox One generation of this console. It feels like living on a planet other than Xbox Live Gold or PS +, even if it does it for a third of the price at $ 20 a year.
We do not care? I will buy it, and you will too. It allows you to play online games and use cloud backups in case you lose your device. As a bonus, it comes with some classic NES games. Done, prints, continues.
Here's the thing: the switch has no competition, in two ways. First of all, there is no competition because it's the only current Nintendo console (the 3DS gets quickly inherited), and that means it's the only console that play Mario Kart. You could say that it did not help much with the Wii U, but I would say that the remarkable thing about the Wii U was not how bad it was sold, but the fact that it was not really good. she was sold. And the reason was that there was no competition.
The Switch also has no competition in its basic format: it's a hybrid home / laptop console, and no one else is doing it. No one else makes a laptop this way either, and its only real competition is that of the smartphones we carry all in our pocket. And if the Switch does something, it reminds us that these smartphones are not yet a real competition for a device like this one.
And all of this shows why the switch will continue to work well, and in this context, the online service will go very well too. I love my Switch, even if it means dealing with some old-fashioned Nintendo strangeness. And I like online games almost as much as I like cloud backups. And so I will buy the online service not by desire but out of necessity, as will millions of others.