Baddman said:
yeh but Im more concerned with the microsd card being exposed when in handheld mode |
It shouldn't fall out on it's own, but just to be safe cover it with tape.
Baddman said:
yeh but Im more concerned with the microsd card being exposed when in handheld mode |
It shouldn't fall out on it's own, but just to be safe cover it with tape.
Mar1217 said:
The mini-direct did approx. that , no ? |
Sorry I meant to say before the March and Mini Direct.
So, apparently the latest Nintendo Direct is a Youtube ad now. They did that with the Mini as well (seen it pop up several times over a course of a week), I think it's a good move. Get more people aware and excited with games coming to the systems that might not view it otherwise. This also means that Nintendo's probably gonna put a ton of effort to make sure they're quick and well recieved.
DF takes an early look at Dark Souls on Switch based on the Direct footage. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cri2WsDgBmI
The good news, it runs at a full 1080p as promised. (Compared to sub-HD on last gen) However, beyond the addition of ambient occlusion, the core assets seem to be the same as the PS3/360 versions.
Nintendo has announced a Nindies Spring Showcase for next week! Hoping they mention something about the Stardew Valley MP update *fingers crossed*
Looks like Devolver will be involved in some way
Last edited by Raven - on 16 March 2018
I hope Pocket Rumble gets released, it's still MIA...
So it's been a while since I played my Switch, but I have a strange question; anyone else find that the Limited Range RGB setting looks better than full range?
Like when I played in full range I remember games like Splatoon 2 looking weirdly overbright.
curl-6 said: So it's been a while since I played my Switch, but I have a strange question; anyone else find that the Limited Range RGB setting looks better than full range? Like when I played in full range I remember games like Splatoon 2 looking weirdly overbright. |
That means your display doesn't support full range. TVs typically don't, but PC monitors do.
Lonely_Dolphin said:
That means your display doesn't support full range. TVs typically don't, but PC monitors do. |
Alrighty, that makes sense. Thanks.