The C button for GameChat. The Switch 2 Pro Controller also remains largely the same, with a couple new buttons. But even with some new bells and whistles, the controllers carry over much of their original identity, especially with regard to the triggers.

In an interview with VentureBeat (via Nintendo Life), Switch 2 producer Kouichi Kawamoto and Switch 2 technical director Tetsuya Sasaki confirmed the Joy-Con 2 controllers and the Nintendo Switch 2 Pro Controller will not have analog triggers and will instead use digital triggers that were used in their previous iterations. Kawamoto and Sasaki stated that the reason they chose to go with digital triggers was because of a more instant response over analog triggers.

Analog triggers are preferred by a lot of players for their use in games that require a certain amount of pressure to be applied to the triggers to control something that's happening. Examples of this are gradually accelerating a car in a racing game or controlling how much water F.L.U.D.D. dispenses in Super Mario Sunshine on the GameCube.

Nintendo Hasn't Used Analog Triggers Since The GameCube

There Are Pros And Cons To Digital And Analog Triggers

Despite the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and most gamepads for PC using analog triggers, Nintendo hasn't used analog triggers for its consoles since the GameCube. Nintendo did acknowledge there are some benefits to analog triggers and considered the possibility for Switch 2, but the company settled on digital.

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Being able to control the pressure of trigger pulls opens up gameplay possibilities and hardware advancements, like the PS5's adaptive triggers allowing for greater impact feeling when swinging a weapon in Silent Hill 2 Remake or drawing a bow in Horizon Forbidden West. On the flip side, digital triggers do allow for quicker response times, meaning input latency will usually be lower and that could be more immersive for some players.

Our Take: Digital Triggers Aren't A Deal-Breaker

Nintendo's Audience May Not Notice The Difference

Nintendo Switch Joy-Cons And Pro Controller

Since it has been so long since Nintendo has used analog triggers, a lot of Nintendo fans may not even notice the difference between digital triggers and analog triggers. The Nintendo Switch Pro Controller is often regarded by many as one of the best controllers on the market, and it uses digital triggers. Most fans' concerns are probably not with the triggers and more so with whether Nintendo will correct the stick drift problem of the original Switch controllers with the Switch 2 controllers.

For ionate hardware techies, the digital triggers may be a disappointment. For others, the digital triggers may be just fine. How well the Joy-Con 2 and Nintendo Switch 2 Pro Controller will perform overall is the bigger question, and we'll find out soon enough when the Nintendo Switch 2 and its accessories launch on June 5.

Source: VentureBeat, Nintendo Life

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