Nintendo Switch 2 Hands-on: Bigger, faster, and with mouse controls

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Nintendo Switch 2 Hands-on: Bigger, faster, and with mouse controls

The Nintendo Switch 2 feels familiar, but it doesn’t feel the same. At a hands-on event in New York, I was among the first to play the successor to Nintendo’s most popular ever console, and I came away largely excited, though that may be more because of the games than the hardware itself.

Don’t get me wrong, the Switch 2 itself is quite nice. But that $450 handheld-turned-console is only as good as the games that Nintendo and third-party developers create.

The Switch 2 is very much a sequel, but one that’s also clearly an evolution of Nintendo’s point of view on gaming. The few hours I spent playing early games made me excited to spend more time with the device. Better start saving up.

Nintendo Switch 2 Hardware

That black matte finish on the Joy-Con 2 controllers and the system itself make an incredible first impression. The system, at 1.18 pounds with the Joy-Con 2 controllers attached, is a bit heavier than I expect a Switch to be, but the larger 7.9-inch display is worth it. (And that’s still lighter than the best PC gaming handheld gaming PCs, like the Steam Deck OLED, which is 1.41 pounds.)

There is something about the lack of color (other than the callbacks to the neon red and orange around the joysticks and under the Joy-Cons) that doesn’t feel very Nintendo. Even the company’s last attempt at having any sort of edge, with the GameCube, had indigo and orange options alongside black. But Hey, I had the black GameCube, so I can get past it. I’m sure there will be variant colors eventually.

Nintendo Switch 2

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The Joy-Cons come off with the press of release buttons on each side. I didn’t spend a ton of time connecting and disconnecting controllers (in fact, most demos had the system hidden away). But on one unit I briefly tried it on, my first impression was that the click was strong. I wouldn’t purposely wiggle the connector the wrong way, but I’m definitely not worried about accidentally pulling the Joy-Cons off.

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