Remember when you use to buy a Switch game and the game would atleast partially before updates, be on the cartridge?

Well imagine buying a key cart for your Switch2 and, you have to download the game from their servers from scratch. The game doesn’t download itself to the cartridge, but onto your Switch 2 consoles internal memory.

Now imagine getting a bad update and trying to delete some data including the update, just to play with the original games version.

physical Key cart games are treated just like they are digital which means you can’t revert the update.

Even if the game is saved onto your Switch’s internal you cannot legally play a key cart game, without the key carts inserted in your switch.

The game data is not stored on the key cartridge but on your switch’s internal memory.

$80 $70 Nintendo Switch 2 carts

  • Moog Muskie@lemmy.zip
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    14 hours ago

    I’m completely in the same boat with how I buy games.

    A little off-topic, but it would be really cool if you could update your physical games so that the update is installed onto the disc/cartridge itself, and it could be then used on any console without an internet connection. I don’t expect that to ever happen, but it would be cool.

    • That is impossible for disc based games afaik (rewritable discs are just physically different from normal ones, and much less durable) but for cartridges it absolutely should be possible.

      It would also be cool if the cartridge also stored save data like they used to, for a true all-in-one experience.

    • slimerancher@lemmy.worldM
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      11 hours ago

      That does sound really cool. I am not sure it would be possible with optical disks, but should be technically possible with the cartridges etc. And yeah, don’t expect it to actually happen.

      • kipo@lemm.ee
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        11 hours ago

        It is 100% possible with optical discs. The manufacturers of optical media toyed with this very idea decades ago.

        • slimerancher@lemmy.worldM
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          11 hours ago

          Ah cool, I haven’t used optical disks in a long time. Still remember needing CD-writer, with discs needing to be special re-writeable ones.