The Switch is officially Nintendo’s most popular console ever


With over 155 million sold, Nintendo’s Switch is officially the company’s biggest console hit ever. It’s been a long road to surpassing the DS, which reached 154 million consoles over its seven-year lifespan. The Switch, meanwhile, is a year shy of its 10-year anniversary.

We’ve seen the original console, the non-hybrid Lite and the OLED versions of the Switch over the decade, but despite being replaced by Switch 2, the original is still selling at a strong pace: 1.36 million units in Q3. Just think how many Joy-Cons it sold/replaced?

Next goal: try to be the best-selling console of all time. Currently, that’s the PlayStation 2.

Nintendo is just shy of five million units to go.

— Mat Smith

The biggest stories you might have missed

Are they talking about us behind our backs?

TMA

TMA (TMA)

Moltbook is a “digital petri dish,” a Reddit-style forum populated entirely by AI agents that post, follow and even gossip about their owners in dedicated submolts. Built using vibe coding, it’s a surreal experiment in autonomous socialization — though there’s no shortage of user-data security flaws. Is Moltbook a profound look at the dead internet theory or just a very loud AI echo chamber? Or something in the middle? Karissa explains it all. (Sorry, Karissa.)

Continue reading.

Lean in.

TMA

TMA (Engadget)

Nintendo’s worst-selling console was probably the Virtual Boy. It sold less than 800,000 units, with only 22 games in Japan and 14 in North America. And it didn’t even have the guts to launch in Europe or Australia.

But Nintendo doesn’t care. It’s brought the Virtual Boy back, baby, as an add-on for the Switch 2, in all its red monochrome ’90s-tech glory. And we finally got to test it.

It even includes the original bipod, which you use to prop it up and lean into it. Yes, you still can’t just wear the thing like modern VR headsets. The Switch 2 console, sans Joy-Cons, then slides in, acting as display, battery and processor.

It seems more of a historical nod than anything else. This is pretty much 30-year-old VR tech, as-is. But… I still want one as a gaming objet d’art. A hundred bucks is a fair chunk of change for that, though. Read on for our full impressions.

Continue reading.

Pre-orders open later this month.

TMA

TMA (Google)

Google posted a teaser video revealing its new entry-level smartphone, the Pixel 10a, in a lovely lilac colorway. We don’t know much more, however. You can see it’s another dual-camera Pixel, with that same flush body — which I like. (How does that already seem retro?)

Leaks suggest a 6.3-inch display and a large 5,100 mAh battery. It otherwise looks and seems like the Pixel 9a, although Google promises that there’s “more in store.” Last year’s A-series launched at $500 — will this land at a similar price? You can pre-order the Pixel 10a on February 18.

Continue reading.

Shouldn’t Microsoft be saying this?

AMD CEO Lisa Su revealed on the company’s latest earnings call that Microsoft’s development of an Xbox with a semi-custom SOC from AMD is “progressing well to support a launch in 2027.” Maybe Microsoft can chase that best-selling console crown too?

Continue reading.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    Which model should you buy?

    Apple’s iPhone lineup has grown more complicated over the years, with multiple models targeting different kinds of buyers. Some prioritize camera performance and display quality while others focus on design…

    Rage against the machine: a California community rallied against a datacenter – and won | Technology

    When a southern California city council proposed building a giant datacenter the size of four football fields last December, five residents vowed to stop it. Through a frenetic word-of-mouth campaign,…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    UK expands Hong Kong visa scheme in wake of Jimmy Lai’s prison sentence | Hong Kong

    UK expands Hong Kong visa scheme in wake of Jimmy Lai’s prison sentence | Hong Kong

    Ellis backs Australia's pace depth to cover big-name absences

    Japanese stocks surge as Takaichi secures historic election victory

    Japanese stocks surge as Takaichi secures historic election victory

    Novo Nordisk shares rise as Hims abandons $49 weight-loss pill

    Novo Nordisk shares rise as Hims abandons $49 weight-loss pill

    Which model should you buy?

    Which model should you buy?

    Trump calls Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show a ‘slap in the face to our country’

    Trump calls Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show a ‘slap in the face to our country’