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curl-6 said:
Soundwave said:

On the same system? I doubt it. Not unless Nintendo is OK with yearly shipments in the 5 million/year range. 

You're turning the Switch into the 3DS if you're just going to let the chipset age that badly, and IMO the sales appeal will drop to a more narrow audience. 

By the end of 2019 alone, Nintendo will have burned through the following franchises:

3D Mario, 2D Mario, Smash Bros, Zelda, Mario Kart, Pokemon Lets Go, Pokemon Gen 8, Animal Crossing, Fire Emblem, Splatoon, DKC, possibly Metroid. 

That's pretty much most of their A/B-tier roster. That's also a big issue. Yes you can make a Mario Odyssey 2 or Mario Kart 9 even, but you're not going to get large hardware boosts in the same way because large portions of the fan base for that IP will already own a Switch. 

A new Switch model with a legitimately higher end chipset that is comparable to what the XBox One X and PS4 Pro (2-3x the power of the base unit) around 2020 are to their predecessors will boost Switch yearly sales, there's just no way it won't. From a business POV it's the right play. 

There's not even any loyalty that you get from the "we want 5-6 years of support no matter what!" crowd, did Nintendo get any loyalty for supporting the Wii for 6 years? Nope, that audience base dumped them like a bad habit with Wii U. Supported the DS for 7 years, and lost half their market with 3DS. You get really very little "bonus points" for pleasing a very small portion of the overall consumer base. Yet everyone and their grandma bought a DS after they only supported the GBA for 3 years.

Switch doesn't need to stay competitive with PS/Xbox; the fact that its surging sales have not affected those platforms' sales shows that they do not directly compete. You don't need a substantially more powerful Switch in 2020 to maintain sales, price cuts and standard hardware revisions will do that.

You're gonna get one in 2020 whether you want it or not, lol. Price cuts don't boost Nintendo's profit margin.