Times Colonist

Job involve travel? Nintendo hopes you’ll Switch pastimes

Console-level gaming on the go latest gambit from video-game legend

- MATT DAY

SEATTLE — Nintendo is trying to erase the divide between video games played in the living room and on the go. And the highly anticipate­d launch of its Nintendo Switch system on Friday is the latest test of the legendary videogame company’s staying power.

Nintendo’s last big hit — the motionsens­ing Wii — was released in 2006. Since then, a successor — the Wii U — was poorly received, and the rise of smartphone gaming has challenged Nintendo’s sales of handheld consoles.

Microsoft and Sony, the other main builders of living-room game consoles, have doubled down in an arms race to pack their new Xbox and PlayStatio­n variants with the processing power to support detailed graphics and virtualrea­lity headsets.

Nintendo, as the Japanese company tends to do, has decided to go its own way.

The Switch functions much like an Xbox or PlayStatio­n when plugged into its docking station, displaying games on a TV screen.

But remove the Switch’s tablet-sized core from the dock, and the same game goes mobile, displaying the action on a portable 6.2-inch touch screen.

Two versatile controller­s, called Joy-Con, can be attached to the side of the Switch on the go or snapped together for use as a more traditiona­l controller. Each Joy-Con also supports motion control input.

The Switch retails in Canada for about $400.

Much will depend on its appeal to people like John Hussey.

With three kids and constant travel for work, Hussey jumped at the chance to play an open-world adventure game anywhere, any time.

After he heard about the Switch, Hussey ordered one in January even though he knew it wouldn’t arrive until Friday.

“Knowing I could get the [The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild] game both at home and on the road, at this stage in my life that’s essential,” said Hussey, a sales rep from Bloomingto­n, Indiana.

“I can’t sit around at home and play a 70-hour game, but if I’m on airplanes or hotels, it’s perfect for me.”

Reviewers who have gotten their hands on the new hardware have so far generally been impressed by the Switch’s design and the polish on launch title The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild.

Many have also pointed out the technologi­cal shortcomin­gs of the device, including 32 GB of storage that severely limits the amount of downloaded games people can store. That capacity is expandable, thanks to SD cards, Nintendo says.

Nintendo could use a hit, and it’s pulling out all the marketing stops.

The company, which has its North American headquarte­rs near Seattle, bought its first-ever Super Bowl ad to tout the device, showing people playing together at parties, and gaming on the go from the kitchen to a laundromat.

The company’s last home console, the Wii U, debuted in 2012 and was the laggard of a generation that includes the Xbox One and PlayStatio­n 4.

Nintendo’s revenue has declined for seven consecutiv­e years, falling by 73 per cent in that time.

With hardware more akin to a highend tablet than a dedicated gaming machine, Nintendo has decided to abandon the race for ultra-highdefini­tion graphics, and some reviewers noticed Zelda stumbling a bit when trying to render images in TV mode.

And in a world of gaming hubs that also host Internet-enabled video and music streaming, the Switch is gaming only. There’s no Netflix or Facebook, or at the outset, an Internet browser.

“It will play games, but that’s about it,” said Lewis Ward, who tracks video-gaming companies for researcher IDC.

Ward said the success of the device might hinge on whether Nintendo can drum up enough interest with sales of its own games to spur independen­t developers to sign on and release their best games for the platform.

Games coming this year from Nintendo’s own studios include Super Mario Odyssey, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and Splatoon 2.

Big developers including Electronic Arts and Activision largely stopped making games for the Wii U.

“They need to perform better than the Wii U,” Ward said. “It will really be about how well can Nintendo bring system-selling games to market. Can they do that every couple of months? That’s going to be really important to drive initial” sales, he said.

 ?? AP ?? A Bic Camera clerk sells a Nintendo Switch in Tokyo Friday, where gamers lined up to buy the new console.
AP A Bic Camera clerk sells a Nintendo Switch in Tokyo Friday, where gamers lined up to buy the new console.

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