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Nexon respond to claims they're using AI-generated Tiktok streamers to advertise The First Descendant
Game Updates

Nexon respond to claims they’re using AI-generated Tiktok streamers to advertise The First Descendant

by admin August 19, 2025


South Korean publishers Nexon are investigating a recent bit of TikTok marketing for their free-to-play shooter The First Descendant, after players spotted some ads that feature AI-generated ‘human’ streamers bigging up the game. Well, we at least have to assume it’s following that, as Nexon’s statement omits mentioning AI in favour of the wonderfully nebulous phrase “certain irregularities”.

If you’ve not seen one of these ads that look to have been posted by The First Descendant’s official account, allow me to show you, because you’ll see right quick why folks have been asking questions. Boom. There are further booms compiled into one Reddit post by user iHardlyTriHard down below.

As you can see, them be some weird renderings of streamy blokes, especially the one who says Nier: Automata in a fashion that’d be hilarious if this wasn’t terrible AI sloppage. Seriously, he pronounces it NEER (pause for ten seconds) audomada. He also gets points for doubling up on his use of free-to-play in his attempt to get you hyped about an F2P update to the F2P looter shooter, which has launched F2Ply.

Anyway, in addition to the more obviously not-streamers, it appears the first one in the compilation below may be based on the likeness of streamer DanieltheDemon. He’s since taken to the comments section of a TikTok about the clips to make clear he didn’t agree to any of this. “I have no affiliation nor contract with The First Descendant,” the streamer wrote. “They stole my face/reactions from my most viral video and used AI to change what my mouth says and a voice that isn’t mine. I did not consent for my likeness to be used…”

While you can’t find these full ads if you go to The First Descendant’s official TikTok account, you can see some of the gameplay clips the AI streamers have been paired with to deliver their samey sales pitches.

What do Nexon have to say about this? The following:

We would like to inform you of certain irregularities identified in the operation of our TikTok Creative Challenge for creators. As a part of our marketing campaign for Season 3: Breakthrough, we recently ran a Creative Challenge program for TikTok creators, which allows creators to voluntarily submit their content to be used as advertising materials. All submitted videos are verified through TikTok’s system to check copyright violations before they are approved as advertising content.

However, we have become aware of cases where the circumstances surrounding the production of certain submitted videos appear inappropriate. Thus, we are conducting a thorough joint investigation with TikTok to determine the facts. We sincerely apologize for the delay in providing this notice as the review is taking longer than expected. Once the verification is complete, we will promptly share an update through an official notice.

So, the company ran a competition of sorts that let anyone create ads for the game, which is a strange example of outsourcing at the very least, then seemingly left final approval for publication to TikTok’s copyright checker, which merrily waved this dodgy stuff through. Either that or Nexon potentially gave it all the green light themselves. Either way, oof.

We’ll have to see what the company say once that investigation’s concluded, but here’s hoping the next statement’s a bit more like the easier-to-parse response offered when Nexon were accused of taking a bit too much inspiration from some Destiny 2 icons.





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August 19, 2025 0 comments
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Gaming Gear

Texas AG to investigate Meta and Character.AI over ‘misleading’ mental health claims

by admin August 19, 2025


Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has announced plans to investigate both Meta AI Studio and Character.AI for offering AI chatbots that can claim to be health tools, and potentially misusing data collected from underage users.

Paxton says that AI chatbots from either platform “can present themselves as professional therapeutic tools,” to the point of lying about their qualifications. That behavior that can leave younger users vulnerable to misleading and inaccurate information. Because AI platforms often rely on user prompts as another source of training data, either company could also be violating young user’s privacy and misusing their data. This is of particular interest in Texas, where the SCOPE Act places specific limits on what companies can do with data harvested from minors, and requires platform’s offer tools so parents can manage the privacy settings of their children’s accounts.

For now, the Attorney General has submitted Civil Investigative Demands (CIDs) to both Meta and Character.AI to see if either company is violating Texas consumer protection laws. As TechCrunch notes, neither Meta nor Character.AI claim their AI chatbot platforms should be used as mental health tools. That doesn’t prevent there from being multiple “Therapist” and “Psychologist” chatbots on Character.AI. Nor does it stop either of the companies’ chatbots from claiming they’re licensed professionals, as 404 Media reported in April.

“The user-created Characters on our site are fictional, they are intended for entertainment, and we have taken robust steps to make that clear,” a Character.AI spokesperson said when asked to comment on the Texas investigation. “For example, we have prominent disclaimers in every chat to remind users that a Character is not a real person and that everything a Character says should be treated as fiction.”

Meta shared a similar sentiment in its comment. “We clearly label AIs, and to help people better understand their limitations, we include a disclaimer that responses are generated by AI — not people,” the company said. Meta AIs are also supposed to “direct users to seek qualified medical or safety professionals when appropriate.” Sending people to real resources is good, but ultimately disclaimers themselves are easy to ignore, and don’t act as much of an obstacle.

With regards to privacy and data usage, both Meta’s privacy policy and the Character.AI’s privacy policy acknowledge that data is collected from users’ interactions with AI. Meta collects things like prompts and feedback to improve AI performance. Character.AI logs things like identifiers and demographic information and says that information can be used for advertising, among other applications. How either policy applies to children, and fits with Texas’ SCOPE Act, seems like it’ll depend on how easy it is to make an account.



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August 19, 2025 0 comments
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Update: Likely Fake Account Claims God Of War Developer Sony Santa Monica Is Working On A New 'Technically Ambitious' IP
Game Updates

Update: Fake Account Claims God Of War Developer Sony Santa Monica Is Working On A New ‘Technically Ambitious’ IP

by admin August 18, 2025


Update (August 18 at 6:07 p.m. CT): Sony has offered a very short follow-up to our outreach simply writing, “This account is not associated with Cory Barlog or Santa Monica Studio.”

Update (August 18 at 12:02 p.m. CT): Following publication of this story, it became apparent that the account in question is more than likely intentionally inauthentic. As a result, we have cause to believe this news is likely inaccurate. We apologize for this mistake. We have reached out to Sony for further confirmation, and will update this story again should we receive comment.

Original story (posted August 18 at 9:27 a.m. CT):

Cory Barlog (pictured above being asked rapid-fire questions about God of War), director of God of War II and 2018’s God of War, shared some vague details about what the team at Sony Santa Monica is currently working on. Sony Santa Monica is the developer, most recently, behind God of War Ragnarök.

“I’d like to share a little bit about our new project,” Barlog wrote on Facebook. “I’m incredibly proud of what the team at Santa Monica Studio has been accomplishing. It’s a technically ambitious project, something that’s not easy to achieve. This is a new IP we’ve been working on for years, and if all goes well, we’re planning to show it to you later this year. I couldn’t be more excited.” Barlog ended the post with two heart emojis.

Barlog’s post doesn’t specify that this is Sony Santa Monica next project or that it is its only project. Since the release of Ragnarök’s free rogue-lite mode DLC, it has been quiet about what’s next.

In terms of God of War, developer Bluepoint Games (primarily known for its remakes of Shadow of the Colossus and Demon’s Souls) was working on a live-service game connected to the God of War franchise. That game was publicly cancelled earlier this year according to a statement Sony shared with Bloomberg.

Whatever this new project may be, we will apparently learn more about it later this year.



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August 18, 2025 0 comments
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Nexon launches investigation into claims AI-generated The First Descendant ads were used on TikTok
Esports

Nexon launches investigation into claims AI-generated The First Descendant ads were used on TikTok

by admin August 18, 2025


Nexon said it has launched an investigation after The First Descendant players noticed a number of seemingly AI-generated advertisements on TikTok, including one that used a content creator’s likeness without permission.

The developer/publisher issued a statement after Reddit user iHardlyTriHard penned a viral post collating four AI-like advertisements they had found after “only 10-15 minutes” browsing their For You Page.

The statement did not apologize directly for the AI advertisements but did apologize for “the delay in providing notice as the [investigative] review is taking longer than expected.” Nexon did not, however, explain when it was notified of the adverts, or when it launched its review.

Nexon said it wanted to “inform [players] of certain irregularities identified in the operation of [its] TikTok Creative Challenge for creators,” and said the campaign “allows creators to voluntarily submit their content to be used as advertising materials.” It also stressed that all submitted videos had been “verified through TikTok’s system.”

“However, we have become aware of cases where the circumstances surrounding the production of certain submitted videos appear inappropriate,” the statement added. “Thus, we are conducting a thorough joint investigation with TikTok to determine the facts.

“We sincerely apologize for the delay in providing this notice as the review is taking longer than expected. Once the verification is complete, we will promptly share an update through an official notice. Thank you for your patience and understanding.”

Nexon has yet to respond to DanieltheDemon’s public claim that he “did not consent for my likeness to be used.”



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August 18, 2025 0 comments
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Update: Likely Fake Account Claims God Of War Developer Sony Santa Monica Is Working On A New 'Technically Ambitious' IP
Game Updates

Update: Likely Fake Account Claims God Of War Developer Sony Santa Monica Is Working On A New ‘Technically Ambitious’ IP

by admin August 18, 2025


Update (August 18 at 12:02 a.m. CT): Following publication of this story, it became apparent that the account in question is more than likely intentionally inauthentic. As a result, we have cause to believe this news is likely inaccurate. We apologize for this mistake. We have reached out to Sony for further confirmation, and will update this story again should we receive comment.

Original story (posted August 18 at 9:27 a.m. CT):

Cory Barlog (pictured above being asked rapid-fire questions about God of War), director of God of War II and 2018’s God of War, shared some vague details about what the team at Sony Santa Monica is currently working on. Sony Santa Monica is the developer, most recently, behind God of War Ragnarök.

“I’d like to share a little bit about our new project,” Barlog wrote on Facebook. “I’m incredibly proud of what the team at Santa Monica Studio has been accomplishing. It’s a technically ambitious project, something that’s not easy to achieve. This is a new IP we’ve been working on for years, and if all goes well, we’re planning to show it to you later this year. I couldn’t be more excited.” Barlog ended the post with two heart emojis.

Barlog’s post doesn’t specify that this is Sony Santa Monica next project or that it is its only project. Since the release of Ragnarök’s free rogue-lite mode DLC, it has been quiet about what’s next.

In terms of God of War, developer Bluepoint Games (primarily known for its remakes of Shadow of the Colossus and Demon’s Souls) was working on a live-service game connected to the God of War franchise. That game was publicly cancelled earlier this year according to a statement Sony shared with Bloomberg.

Whatever this new project may be, we will apparently learn more about it later this year.



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August 18, 2025 0 comments
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Puzzle & Dragons studio claims former executive embezzled $2.35 million of company funds
Esports

Puzzle & Dragons studio claims former executive embezzled $2.35 million of company funds

by admin August 18, 2025


GungHo Online Entertainment, the studio behind Puzzles & Dragons, has claimed that a former senior executive embezzled ¥346 million ($2.35 million) by creating fake work and outsourcing orders to misappropriate company funds.

In a statement released on August 14, 2025 (via Automaton), GungHo Online Entertainment alleged that a former senior executive, who was dismissed for disciplinary reasons, had “engaged in misconduct” over the last few years, including the “misappropriation of company funds through the place of fictitious work orders” (via Google Translate).

“The company became aware of the suspicion of fraudulent activity by the former employee and conducted an initial investigation with the support of forensic teams from external law and accounting firms to determine whether the former employee had engaged in fraudulent activity and to clarify the facts of the matter,” GungHo Online Entertainment wrote in the statement.

GungHo Online Entertainment goes on to allege that, as a result of this initial investigation, it “confirmed” the former employee had embezzled approximately ¥246 million ($1.67 million) of company funds by using a third-party job-ordering service to create “fictitious work orders” which named the company as the client and the former employee as the contractor.

In addition, GungHo Online Entertainment alleges that it “confirmed” the former executive had “fraudulently paid outsourcing fees to a business partner despite the fact that no work had actually been performed,” resulting in a further loss of ¥100 million ($680,000).

In response, the company formed an internal investigation team, led by two independent, external auditors and supported by forensic teams from external law and accounting firms.

The investigation has been conducting interviews with those involved and aimed to provide a “detailed investigation into the facts of the fraudulent conduct in question through digital forensics of the devices used by the former employee.”

The team has also been investigating whether there were any similar cases, “analyzing the causes, and formulating measures to prevent recurrence.”

As a result of this alleged misconduct, the employee in question was dismissed on July 24, 2025.

GungHo Online Entertainment claimed in its statement that the alleged fraud was “maliciously and independently committed by the former employee, who was a senior executive with discretion and authority.” The company also claimed the former employee “engaged in cover-up efforts to avoid detection.”

In the statement, GungHo Online Entertainment revealed that it “has been consulting with investigative authorities and holding discussions regarding filing criminal charges.”

“The company is currently in concrete discussions regarding the acceptance of charges against the former employee and is fully cooperating with the investigative activities of the investigative authorities,” the statement reads.

“Therefore, in consideration of the potential hindrance to the investigative activities, the company will refrain from disclosing the details of this misconduct.”

GungHo Online Entertainment apologised for the “inconvenience and concern” the alleged incident may have caused to relevant parties, but said the impact on the company’s financial results for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2026, is expected to be “minor.”

GungHo Online Entertainment is currently facing a shareholder revolt, with the company due to hold an extraordinary general meeting on September 24, 2025, where shareholders will vote on whether to oust its current CEO and president, Kazuki Morishita.



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August 18, 2025 0 comments
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Haru Urara as a horse girl
Esports

Umamusume player claims to get “boosted luck” by playing the game on a fridge

by admin August 18, 2025



An Umamusume fan has managed to use his smart fridge to play the game to train Minoho Bourbon, claiming that it boosts his luck.

While Umamusume: Pretty Derby has been around in Japan for some time, the popularity of the game truly went through the roof following the release of its global version.

The premise of the game itself is quite simple. In this gacha game, you can train a plethora of different horse girls in their Careers as well as see them participate and thrive in all sorts of races.

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One of the most common ways to play this game is through mobile, considering it’s available on iOS and Android. However, one fan decided to take it a step further and essentially repurposed his fridge into a device to play this simulator title.

Umamusume fan uses smart fridge to train horse girls

User soultgs on TikTok has gone viral for showcasing his Umamusume: Pretty Derby gameplay on his Samsung refrigerator.

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While a fascinating and unique way to play, at the same time, it also poses the question of whether or not it’s comfortable to play on a fridge for long periods, considering the position you’d have to be in, as well as the lack of an armrest.

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In one of the clips, he was seen training Mihono Bourbon when a family member asked him what he was up to. When asked why he played on the fridge, he jokingly said, “Why wouldn’t I play on the fridge? Come on now, it’s a lot bigger on my phone and on my PC. If I can use a fridge, why can’t I use a fridge?”

Eventually, he was met with a decision of having to gamble on a 24% failure on Guts while training. That’s a risky move at first glance, but it certainly didn’t discourage him at all, as he suggested that playing on the fridge helps him with his luck.

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In his own words, he said: “24% failure, but it’s on the fridge, so I have a boosted luck.” As if predicting his own future, the risky option ended up being a success.

Ultimately, in a separate clip, he showcased the labor of his hard work in training his Umamusume. Although she didn’t end up winning the race in the end, he seemed pretty content, mentioning that she had “tried her hardest” in the comments. 

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August 18, 2025 0 comments
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Kraken Pauses Monero Deposits After 51% Attack Claims
Crypto Trends

Kraken Pauses Monero Deposits After 51% Attack Claims

by admin August 17, 2025



Crypto exchange Kraken has paused deposits of Monero (XMR) after warning of a potential 51% attack on the privacy-focused blockchain. The exchange said withdrawals and trading remain open, and deposits will resume once the network is deemed safe.

A 51% attack occurs when one entity controls more than half of a blockchain’s computing power, enabling it to reorder transactions and potentially double-spend. Kraken said on Friday that a single mining pool had surpassed that threshold, posing a risk to network security.

The claim follows an announcement by Qubic, a layer-1 blockchain project with an AI focus that also operates a mining pool. On Monday, Qubic said it controlled the majority of Monero’s hashrate and had reorganized six blocks. The statement was met with skepticism from parts of the Monero community, which denied an ongoing attack.

Monero, the 29th largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization at about $6 billion, is one of the industry’s most prominent privacy-preserving protocols. News of the alleged attack has triggered concern across its community and raised questions about the security of proof-of-work chains with concentrated mining pools.

Qubic’s rise to majority control followed weeks of turbulence. Earlier this month, the pool fell to seventh place among Monero miners after suffering what was described as a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack on August 4. 

The attack reduced its hashrate from 2.6 gigahashes per second to 0.8 GH/s, according to Sergey Ivancheglo, the blockchain developer who claimed responsibility for the takeover attempt.

The pool later recovered, regaining strength and eventually crossing the 50% mark. Qubic described the achievement as a turning point, noting the significance of a $300 million AI-focused blockchain pool overtaking a $6 billion privacy network.

For now, Kraken has said Monero deposits will stay suspended until the network is stable. The incident has intensified debate over the vulnerabilities of smaller proof-of-work ecosystems when a single mining pool accumulates excessive dominance.

Also Read: Turkish Exchange BtcTurk Hacked for $48M in Latest Crypto Exploit





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August 17, 2025 0 comments
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Citibank Ignored Signs Of $20M Crypto Scam, Lawsuit Claims
Crypto Trends

Citibank Ignored Signs Of $20M Crypto Scam, Lawsuit Claims

by admin June 26, 2025



Citibank has been sued by a self-claimed victim of a crypto romance scam, alleging the bank ignored red flags that allowed scammers to make off with $20 million. 

In a lawsuit filed in a Manhattan federal court on Tuesday, plaintiff Michael Zidell alleged Citibank turned “a blind eye to its statutory duties and obligations” when it allowed him to deposit millions of dollars to scammers who have accounts at the bank.

Zidell said he sent $20 million to scammers through dozens of transactions across multiple banks, including nearly $4 million to accounts they held at Citibank.

The complaint said the transactions were part of an elaborate romance scam, commonly called pig butchering, where scammers use a fake persona to build a romantic online relationship with a victim, using it to entice them into a fraudulent investment scheme. 

Facebook romance led to scam NFT investments

Zidell said the scam started in early 2023 when he was contacted on Facebook by a “Carolyn Parker,” a purported business owner with whom he had a “friendly, social relationship, but later perceived a romantic one developing.”

A month into the relationship, Parker told Zidell he should invest in non-fungible tokens, as she claimed she’d made millions doing so and directed him to a trading platform.

Zidell decided to invest in the NFTs and made transfers to various bank accounts given to him by the trading platform. He was told multiple banks were needed due to a large volume of customer deposits. 

A highlighted excerpt of the complaint claims Zidell sent the allegedly fraudulent platform, OpenrarityPro, over $20 million. Source: CourtListener

He said that over the next few months, he sent 43 transfers totalling over $20 million to various bank accounts, but by late April, the website for the platform “was all of a sudden gone” along with his millions.

Citibank ignored scam warning signs, suit claims

The complaint accused Citibank of processing 12 transfers totaling around $4 million that went to a company called Guju Inc.

It also accused the bank of ignoring “red flags” in Guju’s accounts and alleged that the “large, round numbers of funds, among other things, should have triggered the bank’s investigation into the suspicious activity.”

“[Citibank] failed to implement adequate securities measures, failed to detect clearly suspicious transactions and failed to monitor the accounts even though large, round sums were transferred in and out of the accounts from trusts and other individuals in a suspicious manner,” read the complaint. 

Zidell said Citibank aided and abetted the alleged scam and accused the bank of negligence, claiming it had “a duty to exercise due care in monitoring suspicious transactions.”

Cointelegraph has contacted Citibank for comment.

Romance scams are a multibillion-dollar swindle

Last year, romance scammers stole over $5.5 billion across 200,000 identified cases, security firm Cyvers told Cointelegraph in February.

Pig butchering losses by platforms. Source: Cyvers

Chainalysis estimated in February that all types of crypto scams stole around $9.9 billion in 2024, but that could rise to $12.4 billion as the analytics firm identifies more scammer-tied crypto wallets.

Earlier this month, US authorities said they’ve already seized $225 million tied to pig butchering scams this year in an operation led by the Secret Service, in what was the largest crypto seizure ever by the agency.

Legal Panel: Crypto wanted to overthrow banks, now it’s becoming them in stablecoin fight 



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June 26, 2025 0 comments
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Nintendo switch 2 package
Product Reviews

Switch 2 has a 120 Hz screen with response times that are too slow for 60 Hz gaming, tester claims

by admin June 26, 2025



Nintendo’s latest Switch 2 handheld has a screen with room for improvement. According to Chinese reviewer Chimolog, the Switch 2’s display has an abysmal 17.06 ms average response time.

It’s worth mentioning that the reviewer makes no mention of their testing methodology so take this information with a pinch of salt. The Switch 2 comes armed with a 1080p, 120 Hz, 7.9-inch, LCD display.

At best, the Switch 2’s screen was allegedly capable of an 8.88 ms response time, but at worst, it achieved an impressively slow 27.46 ms response time. At a 17 ms average response time, the Switch 2 screen is so slow that the pixels cannot physically change to some colors fast enough to project a 60 Hz (60 FPS) gaming experience accurately. The Chinese reviewer compared the Switch 2’s response time to a plethora of 60 Hz and 75 Hz gaming monitors, and the console came in dead last by quite a significant margin.


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The next closest monitor in the reviewer’s testing suite was the Innocn M2U 27 Mini-LED monitor featuring an 11.06ms response time. By way of comparison, the M2U had a 65% better response time compared to the Switch 2.

It seems Nintendo prioritized all other areas of the display. Chimolog allegedly recorded contrast ratios, brightness uniformity, brightness, and color gamut performance that matched or exceeded the performance of typical mainstream displays. The display allegedly boasts a contrast ratio of 1309:1, 1.54% brightness uniformity, and peak brightness of 303 cd/m². The display’s color gamut covers 100% of the sRGB color space, 99.6% of the DCI-P3 color space, 97.9% of the Adobe RGB color gamut, and 71.9% of the Rec. 2020 color gamut. The panel Nintendo is using for the Switch 2 is allegedly an IPS display of some kind.

The only other area that Nintendo sacrificed quality for was apparently text readability. The Chinese reviewer claims the IPS panel in the Switch 2 has a “special RGB” layout where the RGB diodes are arranged in a wave-like pattern, causing text to appear blurry (similar to the text readability problems that can be found on many OLED panels).

Unfortunately, the reviewer could not properly test the display’s capabilities at 120 Hz to check if the same response time issues plague the display’s maximum refresh rate. Generally, though, response times get lower the closer a display is to running at its highest rated refresh rate. But there’s no knowing if the response times would be fast enough, regardless, for a proper 120Hz experience for the same reasons mentioned before.

Get Tom’s Hardware’s best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.

The Switch 2’s display has the worst performance characteristics of pretty much any display on the market today, including the original Switch (not to mention the Switch OLED). Monitors Unboxed found the Switch 1’s LCD is 10ms faster than the Switch 2’s display (its testing showcased an even slower 33.3ms average response time for the Switch 2).

However, Nintendo’s decision to put an ultra-slow screen in the Switch 2 won’t stop gamers from buying the console. The console has already broken a world record in sales, selling 3.5 million units in just four days, making the Switch 2 the best-selling Nintendo console in history. The Switch is also the only console series that is officially capable of playing Nintendo games, so gamers have little choice but to deal with the poor screen performance if they want to play their favorite Nintendo games. Hopefully, Nintendo will ship an OLED version of the Switch 2 sooner rather than later to rectify the console’s awful display.



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June 26, 2025 0 comments
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