“Well, the Joy-Con 2’s controllers have been designed from the ground up,” said Nate Bihldorff, senior vice president of product development and publishing. “They’re not Hall Effect sticks, but they feel really good.”

To the 3-5 pain piggies somehow lurking this site still: Do. not. buy.

    • FourteenEyes [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      16 days ago

      Yes, it means they get stick drift as the mechanical parts were out. Hall effect sticks use electromagnetism so the parts don’t actually touch so they don’t wear out. And they’re only marginally more expensive.

      Nintendo is really cheaping out on this. But even this has nothing on the fact that they’re selling physical copies of games that do not contain the game data and only have an unlock code on a manufactured card. It is immensely wasteful.

        • Owl@lemm.ee
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          16 days ago

          xbox elite controllers are old, hall effect sticks werent a thing when they were sold.

          • GeneralSwitch2Boycott [none/use name]@hexbear.netOP
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            16 days ago

            They have existed since the Sega Saturn. They don’t use them because there’s a small trade off between top-dead-center accuracy and not wearing out on hall effect sticks as well as a minor cost difference (and I think power use). Although tunneling magnetoresistance is supposed to use less power and be more accurate overall while having the other hall effect benefits. The only draw back is that hall effect sticks are at the mercy of the springs in the stick since you need those to return the stick back to center, but that’s about it.