When a company creates a successful product you can bet that unreliable competitors will try to duplicate the document with cheap clones in the hope that a few simple sales can be fired from unsuspecting buyers. We saw it happen with the NES Mini, and it just happened with the Nintendo Switch.
It says hello to the & # 39; Nanica Smitch & # 39;
Software legalization is not the end of the head here; while the Smitch has the controls available, the Joy-Con-style control, is much larger than the switch and the pants do not have any sort of motion control. While it's difficult to say categorically, the screen does look a lot lower, too. No dock, either – instead, TV playback is achieved by connecting the console directly to your display cable. You can see the console in action below.
Now, any gamer you know will see this from a distance, but it's easy to see how easily parents and grandparents can be fooled; Smitch installation looks very similar to switchch & # 39; s, and the basic design of the console is very close.
Let's hope there won't be many children getting this under the Christmas tree in a matter of days.