Two Joy-Con drift lawsuits have been dismissed after five years
Two Joy-Con drift lawsuits have been dismissed after five years
Two significant lawsuits over Nintendo Switch Joy-Con drift have been dismissed in U.S. court.
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It sure would be a shame if you bought new, identical Joy-Con controllers, found they didn't have drift, and returned the old drifty ones by accident.
5/28 Ninja Edit: today I learned is a form on Nintendo's website where you can fill out a repair request form. I thought the US had been excluded https://repair.nintendo.com/cc/soConsumer.html?lang=en&sys=SWTCH&type=JOY-CON
26 1 ReplyKinda dumb to do that when they already repair them for free (including shipping) with < 1 week turnaround.
1 0 ReplyUnfortunately, that's not available in the US :(
1 1 ReplyI just used it in the US last month, it definitely is.
1 0 ReplyYou're totally right. For some reason I (mis)remembered it only being in the EU while the US was excluded. I found the form on Nintendo's website and will look into that later.
2 0 Reply
Kind of an asshole move towards whoever winds up with them.
2 20 ReplyI would hope Nintendo is not using returned hardware for replacements. It happens accidentally in every job I've worked, but absolutely should not be the normal process.
19 0 ReplyIt is at Amazon, at least now. Twice I've gotten used for new. I'm not shopping there if I can possibly avoid it at this point.
3 0 ReplyThey have been since at least 1999, when I recieved a refurbished GBC instead of my original GBC.
3 0 Reply