Seen any Nintendo Switches floating around recently — for example, in the viral EWNetwork video of a YouTuber brandishing his shiny, new Switch console? Don’t hold your breath for a leak. It’s a fake.
Two days ago, Etika from EWNetwork appeared to reveal a Nintendo Switch in his Brooklyn apartment. Yelling, he held it up on stream, clicked in the controllers and fell over in a fit of joy:
It was miraculous. A Switch, available and playable, in Brooklyn, many months prior to its release? Holy Nintendo, Batman! A fan even launched a funding campaign for fear of repercussions from Nintendo.
Redditors quickly went about verifying the console’s authenticity. They soon noticed that, well, there are some discrepancies. The buttons, for example, looked way different from the Switch’s in official advertising materials. The fonts didn’t match at all.
It was, indeed, a fake. Etika’s latest video about “Life With Nintendo Switch” disclosed that the Switch was fake. And now we know how it came to be.
Today, Finland-based designer Frank Sandqvist posted a YouTube video about how he made a phony Nintendo Switch, detachable controllers and all, for EWNetwork. He had also made the fake “NX” controller that “leaked” earlier this year, the little devil. He used a combination of 3D printing, UV printing, laser cutting, sanding and spray-painting to craft a remarkably accurate replicate of the upcoming console:
“We had to do quite a bit of guesswork on the back,” Sandqvist said. All in all, it looks just like the console that appeared in the Switch trailer. Except those damned buttons.
It’s an impressive feat for a fake console. Seriously impressive. Also seriously deceptive. Don’t believe what you see, and especially if it’s a leaked Nintendo console.
Comments
One response to “That YouTuber’s Infamous ‘Nintendo Switch’ Is Fake”
That button lettering is a pretty huge oversight. Also that Home button I don’t think stood proud on the actual console.