@Captain_Toad Yeah, I think they realize that they may have burned some bridges with Nintendo's audience. They've lost an important amount of trust with us.
@Lucina "There's some serious double standards going on when it comes to Nintendo and third parties, and frankly, I'm tired of it. We need to hold third parties and certain indie developers responsible instead of casting blame on Nintendo for all their third party woes." Well said, my friend, well said.
@AVahne Also, you have to understand that there's not just ARM processors powering the switch. There's also a suite of Geforce drivers, custom APIs, and other performance enhancing software that will be the likes of what you'd find in Nvidia's latest Geforce PC cards. We should expect the Switch's performance to be interesting, not the boring underpowered mess that's dominating speculation. There also may be a surprise or two in there, like a dual-functioning CPU/GPU.
@AVahne Your uninformed comparison of the Switch to the Wiiu is why Nvidia felt the need to stay in touch lately with the public about their involvement in building its graphics performance.
With its mobile-friendly components and Nintendo's branding, it's easy to speculate that it will be underpowered. Or just another Wiiu in terms of performance. But if you pay attenton to Nvidia's constant meetings with investors, where the company's CEO gives more and more details on what makes the Switch tick, you'll start to realize that there truly is something special under the gaming device's hood.
Here are some facts, according to genuine Nvidia press releases and direct quotes from company interviews:
1. The switch will be unlike anything the world of gaming has ever had before. The perfect marriage of a dedicated console and a dedicated handheld.
2. The Switch's modern architecture will allow easy ports from the PC, PS4, and XB1.
3. The Switch will have a unique scalable architecture that allows true console power when docked, with battery-friendly minimal compromise when undocked.
Bonus fact: The Switch will be a pleasant surprise.
Comments 4
Re: Project CARS Isn't Planned to Appear on the Nintendo Switch
@Captain_Toad Yeah, I think they realize that they may have burned some bridges with Nintendo's audience. They've lost an important amount of trust with us.
Re: Project CARS Isn't Planned to Appear on the Nintendo Switch
@Lucina "There's some serious double standards going on when it comes to Nintendo and third parties, and frankly, I'm tired of it. We need to hold third parties and certain indie developers responsible instead of casting blame on Nintendo for all their third party woes." Well said, my friend, well said.
Re: Project CARS Isn't Planned to Appear on the Nintendo Switch
@AVahne Also, you have to understand that there's not just ARM processors powering the switch. There's also a suite of Geforce drivers, custom APIs, and other performance enhancing software that will be the likes of what you'd find in Nvidia's latest Geforce PC cards. We should expect the Switch's performance to be interesting, not the boring underpowered mess that's dominating speculation. There also may be a surprise or two in there, like a dual-functioning CPU/GPU.
Re: Project CARS Isn't Planned to Appear on the Nintendo Switch
@AVahne Your uninformed comparison of the Switch to the Wiiu is why Nvidia felt the need to stay in touch lately with the public about their involvement in building its graphics performance.
With its mobile-friendly components and Nintendo's branding, it's easy to speculate that it will be underpowered. Or just another Wiiu in terms of performance. But if you pay attenton to Nvidia's constant meetings with investors, where the company's CEO gives more and more details on what makes the Switch tick, you'll start to realize that there truly is something special under the gaming device's hood.
Here are some facts, according to genuine Nvidia press releases and direct quotes from company interviews:
1. The switch will be unlike anything the world of gaming has ever had before. The perfect marriage of a dedicated console and a dedicated handheld.
2. The Switch's modern architecture will allow easy ports from the PC, PS4, and XB1.
3. The Switch will have a unique scalable architecture that allows true console power when docked, with battery-friendly minimal compromise when undocked.
Bonus fact: The Switch will be a pleasant surprise.