Console Nintendo Switch OLED Model The Legend of Zelda Tears of the Kingdom Edition
Link para compra BR: https://amzn.to/3RtQ5To
Buy here: https://amzn.to/4hYMUOE
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Console Nintendo Switch OLED Model The Legend of Zelda Tears of the Kingdom Edition
Link para compra BR: https://amzn.to/3RtQ5To
Buy here: https://amzn.to/4hYMUOE
guys guys Guys GUYS GUYS G-
Nintendo Switch OLED Model Announced, Releasing October 8th Earlier today, Nintendo announced the Nintendo Switch OLED Model, which is the latest revision in the Nintendo Switch family. The console offers a number of additional enhancements over the current Switch and Switch Lite models, and will be releasing later this year. Full details below!
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Console Nintendo Switch OLED Model Pokémon Scarlet and Violet Edition
Link para compra BR: https://amzn.to/3Ec8v8c
Buy here: https://amzn.to/42jc7O1
Just like the launch of BOTW 6 years ago, I’m posting this.
I didn’t get the switch on launch, only the game, but this time I got the switch the day after it released (pre-order), as well as the game.
[Gallery] A Closer Loook At The Nintendo Switch OLED Model - The Legend Of Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom Edition
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Got myself a Switch OLED from GameStop!
The one I had been playing on was a first edition model, lasted about as long as the Switch has been out, and it's slowly getting old and falling apart, so I wanted to buy myself a fresher model to transfer my data to before my old one eventually croaks. This was a pre-owned OLED, it has been well preserved, and it already has a screen protector on it, so I lucked out a nice deal.
On the one hand, there was so much smoke pertaining the incoming announcement of a new Switch model that you had to assume there had to be fire of some type. On the other hand, I honestly think many of the people who bought wholesale into the rumors of a “Switch Pro” essentially set themselves up for disappointment. Even giving the new model the potential moniker of “Switch Pro” was likely a mistake.
If you actually look back at Nintendo’s history of console revisions, the fact of the matter is that most of them have never really been about improving the specs of the processors. In the case of their handhelds, most revisions have been about adding QoL features like different form factors or bigger/brighter screens (the GBA SP, the 3DS XL). Meanwhile, in the case of their home consoles, most revisions have been about providing a cheaper alternative (often actually taking features out of the machine, like in the case of the Wii Mini). Even console revisions like the DSi or the New 3DS that did include improved processors have however been very modest upgrades compared to the originals.
In that sense, it was always extremely unlikely that the new Switch model was going to be something akin to the PlayStation 4 Pro or the Xbox One X. Nintendo is just not interested in taking part in the same technological arms race as Sony and Microsoft, and they haven’t been part of that since the Wii/DS era.
Personally, I always assumed a new Switch model was going to be something more akin to the 3DS XL, that is, something with a better and/or bigger screen, possibly with some additional QoL features added. And if the rumors of it being compatible with 4k TV’s had any merit to them, I imagined it was more likely going to be “4k enabled” in the same way that the Xbox One S was 4k enabled (that is, through them adding a video upscaler in the dock rather than any fancy new processors or anything like that). Lo and behold: They finally announced the Switch OLED model, with a fancier slightly bigger screen and some added QoL features (no 4k however). Mostly what I expected.
Yet, it seems that far too many people took the “4k enabled” thing far too literally and expected things that just seemed out of the realm of likelihood or even possibility. Lo and behold: A massive wave of disappointment over something that was never actually promised (and if you paid attention, was always extremely unlikely).
Now, as things stand, I do think it’s entirely possible that Nintendo might be contemplating adding 4k capabilities or even incorporating Nvidia’s DLSS technology to some upcoming new console. But that one is way more likely going to be the Switch’s successor (however they decide to name it) rather than a souped-up “Pro” model.