Wow, I'm surprised to see news about a new Nintendo, and that it uses a Tegra.
In hindsight, it almost only could be a Tegra : AMD cancelled all their ARM APU designs, be they "Sky Bridge" and whatever the other one might have been.
Hum, no... I don't know what to say. The dual controllers thing really bothers as it implies different inputs than in "full" handheld mode. That calls for completely tailored experience with disparities between single and multi players mode (or games that do not use the full scope of the system inputs when "whole").
2-1 designs or selling the system by pairs both ideas sound better to me. That design choice implies many things, like two or three batteries ( one per controller and possibly one for the central unit).
It sounds really complicated (read costly) for a system meant to reach kids. I suspect one selling point will be it can keep busy two kids for the price of a single device but I'm iffy about the reach of such an argument in a world of cheap tablets.
I wonder how it's done, will the handheld be huge, heavy and weird as with that of the Wii U? I don't like that.
Does it still have that autistic concept of the Wii U where you used the huge handheld and the TV together, which is ridiculous and can only be done by Player 1? Or it's back to a more normal single screen (TV or handheld, or cloned output at most)
Can you play as 3 or 4 players?
As for the hardware Nvidia is welcome. Tegra X1 are used in the dev kits but that says nothing about the clock speed of those parts. Tegra X1 CPU set-up sounds too high end and power hungry for a Nintendo design. X2 A73 + x4 A35 sounds like a best case scenario to me, x4 A35 would not surprise me.
I don't think N will have gone for a high resolution screen so two SM at low clock speed should do the trick.
I suspect then target is to match or exceed the WiiU experience, the screen resolution being the factor that will set the requirements for the GPU.
As a side note I think it will sell as portable Wii, the two controllers allowing to do what the Wii did.
Whatever is done I think a Wii U is easily matched or beaten.
Even PS4 / Xbox One are not *that* hard to match either : it'll be lacking a lot in raw power but GPU features are similar, RAM may be 4x smaller : bummer, but could be worse ; if this get fast ARM CPUs, they'll be not that behind the slow x86 CPUs in consoles.
But in the first place : I think this will be able to run same engines, middleware as on PC and current consoles. No wheels to reinvent, they might provide OpenGL 4.5 and Vulkan. If so, the hardware and software would make this NX arguably closer to a PC than to smartphones/tablets.
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How the F do you put two controllers on a Game Boy anyway?
Anyone thought of the Famicom, with two attached and wired simple controllers?
Or does Nintendo have a rule that each new product must bring back some unusual or weird aspect of a previous and sometimes obscure design.
Nintendo made DS-shaped games in the 80s, and they also made this :