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No.1 Scheffler goes for third Masters crown in four years
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Where Trump's tariffs could hurt Americans' wallets
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Trump says 'very close to a deal' on TikTok
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Trump tariffs on Mexico: the good, the bad, the unknown
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Postecoglou denies taunting Spurs fans in Chelsea defeat
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Oscar-winning Palestinian director speaks at UN on Israeli settlements
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With tariff war, Trump also reshapes how US treats allies
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Fernandez fires Chelsea into fourth as pressure mounts on Postecoglou
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Penguin memes take flight after Trump tariffs remote island
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Trump defiant as tariffs send world markets into panic
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Rockets forward Brooks gets one-game NBA ban for technicals
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Canada imposing 25% tariff on some US auto imports
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Trump tariffs hammer global stocks, dollar and oil
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Nintendo's megahit Switch console: what to know
Gaming giant Nintendo is set to unveil the successor to its phenomenally popular Switch console on Wednesday.
Here are some facts about its success:
- 150 million sold -
Nintendo has sold around 150 million Switch machines since the gadget's launch in March 2017.
That makes it the third best-selling console in video game history, behind Sony's PlayStation 2 and the Nintendo DS.
Nintendo estimates it has sold a colossal 1.3 billion games that run on the console.
The biggest hit by far was "Mario Kart 8 Deluxe" (67 million copies sold), followed by "Animal Crossing: New Horizons" which became a must-play during Covid (47 million sold).
- Initial indifference -
The arrival of the Switch -- a hybrid console that can be played on-the-go or at home connected to a television -- revolutionised the video game world.
But plans for the console were unveiled in 2015 to overwhelming indifference after the successor to Nintendo's popular Wii device, the Wii U, flopped commercially.
The Switch was at first seen as pricey, lacking games and with little to no chance of competing for consumers' wallets with Sony's more powerful PlayStation 4.
"Console games had lost ground to mobile games, and were seen by investors, media and the general public as no longer having any utility," said analyst Hideki Yasuda of Toyo Securities.
"Expectations for the Switch were very low," he told AFP.
"But once it started selling well, opinion quickly changed."
- 'Lateral thinking' -
The Switch was a high point in Nintendo's creativity over the past 40 years, according to Florent Gorges, a French author of books on the Kyoto-based company's history.
On a technical level, the console was anything but cutting-edge, however.
But Nintendo's knack for creating appealing games, combined with the console's portability, made it a winner.
"The Switch perfectly respects Nintendo's DNA, which is 'lateral thinking with withered technology'," said Gorges.
"This means to succeed in making something new out of something old," he explained.
It was the philosophy of Gunpei Yokoi, the father of Nintendo's Game & Watch series of electronic games, which sold tens of millions of units in the 1980s.
- Reorganisation -
The success of the Switch prompted Nintendo to combine its home and portable consoles divisions into one unit.
"Nintendo had two activities, with totally different prices, totally different software development," said Serkan Toto from Tokyo firm Kantan Games.
But since 2017, thanks to the Switch, "there has been a constant and very reliable flow of games developed directly by Nintendo, and that has helped them enormously," he told AFP.
P.A.Mendoza--AT