While I don’t agree Splatoon is one of them, Super Mario Maker 2 just isn’t the same without that Wii U tablet. Yes, some franchises were more fun to play on Wii U than Switch because of the controller. Looking at what you wrote, I can see myself agreeing with the ideas you’re presenting. Now, your point isn’t that it will, but that it should. That’s how confident I am in this never happening. If Nintendo officially ports the Wii U tablet to the Switch, I will post a video of myself to PornHub. You want to talk about the Wii U tablet, specifically why it should be ported to Switch. I imagine this is a more trying time for somebody who shares an apartment and maybe doesn’t get along with their roommate so they’re just holed up in their bedroom.īut anyway, that’s beside the point. Even I don’t want to complain because at least I have a full apartment for myself. As somebody who lives alone, there is nothing more bothersome than the cries of people who’ve run out of stuff to do when they have spouses, kids, and/or pets at their home. If Nintendo were to lean into that assumption instead of struggling against it, everybody wins.ĬJ: First of all, thank you for not complaining about having to be home with a kid during our current era of social distancing. A lot of people didn’t buy a Wii U because they assumed it was just a peripheral. Give Switch-only games like Animal Crossing: New Horizons optional second-screen functionality (Nook Phone and item selection on a touch screen) and you have a deluxe experience with a huge audience. So if just about all of the Wii U’s software is getting ported to Switch, why can’t the Wii U’s signature piece of hardware? It wouldn’t be cheap, and tech-wise, it wouldn’t be easy for Nintendo, but I think it would sell. On Switch, they’re smoother but way more tired (like me in this E3 video). On Wii U, The Wonderful 101‘s many dual-screen specific puzzles are clunky, but they at least feel inspired (like me in this beauty contest). Local matches of Pokkén Tournament feel a lot less cramped on Wii U thanks to the dual screens (one for each player). Splatoon 2 is better than the first in almost every way, but without the original’s map screen squid jump and loading time mini-games on Splatoon 1, it will never have it all. Captain Toad was way more fun with the touch screen and Super Mario 3D World even uses the GamePad microphone. That’s just the start of my “games that feel worse on Switch” list. Then I remembered, “Wait, if I’m going to play this on the TV, that means no touch-screen user interface for building new levels,” and my interest dropped like a stone down a warp pipe. When the new update for Super Mario Maker 2 was announced last week, I was instantly excited. Not only is the Wii U GamePad more resilient to accidental falls than its younger, more successful sibling, but the touch screen + TV interaction has done a ton to make games more interesting and fun for him. The Wii U has helped a lot with that, much more so than the Switch. With no pre-school, parks, trips to the mall, or playdates with friends, we’ve had to get creative in order to stave off boredom and keep him learning. Sheltering at home hasn’t been too tough for me, but for my four-year-old son, it’s been a huge adjustment. If so, could the next Year of Luigi be far behind?
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