THE LONG-AWAITEDNintendo Switch 2 finally dropped this week, and while it makes a number of big improvements on its predecessor—things like a better screen, beefier internal specs, and more accessible controls—there is one thing it's worse at. According to the repairability advocates and gleeful disassemblers at iFixit, it's even harder to fix than the original Switch.
Perhaps most worrying for new owners is that, despite a new “from the ground up” redesign for the Switch’s Joy-Con controllers, the root cause of stick drift—something that many owners of the original have long complained of—doesn't seem to have been truly addressed in the Switch 2.
Stick drift is something that can happen to joysticks, usually over time or under heavy usage, where movement is registered without user input. iFixit points out that less-drifty joystick tech that relies on magnets instead of potentiometers, like Hall effect or Tunneling Magnetoresistance (TMR) sensors, can help prevent this, but it found neither of those present in the Switch 2.
“From what we can tell, the redesign didn’t include a revision to the core tech that causes joystick drift,” iFixit writes in its blogpost. “Unless Nintendo is using some miracle new material on those resistive tracks, or the change in size magically solves it, the best fix is going to come from third-party replacements again.”











