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FunFan said:
JEMC said:

But SD cartridges and slots are mass produced, and therefore are cheap. What you describe would be made only for Nintendo, and that low production would make it a lot more expensive.

Don't get me wrong, it would be great if Nintendo or anyone else used something like that, but between not having actual need for them right now and the cost it would have, no one will go that route.

I guess evidence speaks louder than anything else.

Exibit No.1:

Biwin NGFF 60GB SATA III M.2 drive is only $25 bucks. (Link)

Thats customer price and rewritable memory. According to their site this baby has a read speed of 563 MB/s.

Exhibit No.2:

M.2 drives are used in tablets, the interface can't be that expensive to implement. Plus the Switch is a tablet.

Exhibit No.3:

Nintendo 64 didn't adhere to a Standar for it's cartridges and they were very high end for their time. 50 MB/s in 1996 if I'm not mistaken.

My point, your honor, is that the tech is there for implementing great things at realistic prices and Nintendo has history of using very "exotic "designs in their parts. I'm not claiming that they will do it, but simply point out that It Is a realistic option and is up to Nintendo to taka advantage of it(and would be nice if they do).

The problem is that even if that thing costs 1/5th to Nintendo, that would still $5 which is $4 and something more than a BD disc and also much more than a semi-regular SD card.

In any case, this discussion is kind of useless because we've already seen from the reveal trailer how the Switch cartridges are, and they look more like regular SD cards (albeit a bit more thick) than an M.2 drive with a case.



Please excuse my bad English.

Currently gaming on a PC with an i5-4670k@stock (for now), 16Gb RAM 1600 MHz and a GTX 1070

Steam / Live / NNID : jonxiquet    Add me if you want, but I'm a single player gamer.