Beyond the original switch games and upgrades to valuable storage, Switch 2 Nintendo Switch also sees the increase of game cube titles in the Retro Library available to users. Like the first consoles such as NES, SNES, or classic sports available for game boys, they are all packed in a launcher, each game is included in the relevant collection installed at the same time.
This is fine for the SNES collection-with about 80 80 titles that are barely unbearable in the 267 MB bundle, who cares that if there is a group you will never play? Still only four titles are available at this time (F -Zero, Legend of Zealda: The Wind Walker, Solcolibour IIAnd Super Mario Strikers), NSO Game Cube is already a 6-GB commitment. The original game cube discs can only be shy 1.5 GB, so each increase is seeing that the demand for launcher is still more space, and every unwanted game can prevent you from installing something else you want to play. Although it only affects NSO users who use the Game Cube Library, the freedom to choose which game cube games will be installed will be a great help.
The problem with the solution
Courtesy Amazon
Sandesk
MicroSD Express (256 GB)
The good news is that switch 2 still allows users to increase storage through microSD cards. The problem is solved – just sweep a large -scale capacity card, right? Not enough. Switch 2 Only MicroSD Express supports format card. There is a good reason. The new standard offers very fast data reading and writing speed, which allows sports to be loaded faster – but the rule causes problems.
There is a price. MicroSD Express cards cost more than GB storage per GB storage. At the time of writing, a Sandesk 128GB card is $ 17, while the microSD Express format card according to its switch 2 is $ 54 for similar storage-a 3x premium. There is another card capacity. The market has a handful of 1 Terbite MicroSD Express cards, but the supply is low, and the prices are astronomical. Although you can use more than one microSD card technically with your console, Nintendo suggests against it, there is no option to replace many small cards.
Further confusion, SD Express format only refers to this pace, not capacity, which has its own standards. Most microSD cards you are likely to buy, whether they are in Express speed format or not, are “SD Extension Capacity” standards, or SDXC. It can theoretically hold 2 TB data, though you can find the biggest legitimate card on sales.
However, in 2018, the SD Association – Industry Body that set the quality of the SD memory card – introduced from SD ultra capacity, or SDUC. It supports amazing 128 TB capabilities, “regardless of the form element, micro or full size, or interface type (…) SD Express.” There are no SDUC cards in the market yet, so we make a long and long journey from being able to slap the 8-TB card in your switch 2 and install everything that you can dream of. In theory, though, of course, this means that you will be able to do that one day?


