Nintendo, unlike Microsoft and Sony, has been keen not to mention the hardware power of the upcoming Nintendo Switch.
We’re mere weeks from launch and there isn’t a single piece of official
information you can find that will tell you, say, how powerful is the
CPU and GPU, or how much RAM it has, and so on.
Naturally, this makes fans anticipate any official – or seemingly
official – documents pertaining to the Switch specs with great
excitement. A Reddit
post that appeared earlier today, contains a massive amount of
information. The details are sourced from three, developer-only
documents covering the console’s hardware specs, system features, and
other devkit instructions.
The files are big, and go into great detail
– as you’d expect – into each of their respective subjects. While many
of what’s included may not be relevant to the general public, some of
what’s there is intriguing to say the least.
Most importantly, the documents list the Switch’s hardware specs. As
you can see, the Switch appears to have a quad core ARM Cortex-A57 CPU
that has a maximum speed of 2GHz. The GPU is a Maxwell-based, Nvidia
chip with 256 CUDA cores and max speed of 1GHz.
The details for these two appear to be different from the most recent leak from back in December, which suggested the CPU would max out at 1GHz, not 2GHz, and the GPU would only run at 768MHz, instead of a full 1GHz.
As for RAM, the Switch appears to have 4GB of it, shared with the
VRAM, according to the docs. Speaking of memory, the maximum cartridge
limit seems to be 32GB, and the sizes mentioned are 1, 2, 4, 8, and 16GB
besides.
Outside of specs, a section titled “E-Commerce Features,” mentions
that the Switch will not have support for free-to-play-style virtual
currencies at launch. Support for DLC and season passes, however, will
be available. The feature is expected to appear sometime post launch.
It’s important to note that the documents date back to July 2016, and
they refer to the console as the NX – the Switch’s in-development
codename. We’ve also not been able to verify the claims in the
documents, and while they do appear official, they could be very good
fakes.
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