New Nintendo patent suggests Switch 2 may solve joycon drift (www.dexerto.com)
from simple@lemm.ee to games@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 18:00
https://lemm.ee/post/7301675

A patent filed by Nintendo suggests that they’re working on Hall Effect style joysticks for the Switch 2 that would eliminate stick drift almost entirely.

#games

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garretble@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 18:20 next collapse

I had to replace my original sticks this year because they finally started to drift after five years or so.

I now have some Hall Effect sticks in each side, and I haven’t had any problems in the last six months with them. I really hope they go this route for the switch 2. It makes a lot of sense for them to, as well. They wouldn’t have to deal with fixing as many, and consumers would get a better product. Could be a rare win for both parties when I’m sure there’s some bean counters going “but if the controllers break more often we can sell more controllers!”

mp3@lemmy.ca on 09 Sep 2023 18:22 next collapse

Could be a rare win for both parties when I’m sure there’s some bean counters going “but if the controllers break more often we can sell more controllers!”

Hopefully a class-action wipes off all profits gained from that way of thinking.

Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 19:25 collapse

Unfortunately not. Planned obsolescence fuckery is the norm now, not the exception.

mp3@lemmy.ca on 09 Sep 2023 22:07 collapse

At least one class-action going ahead so far.

…citynews.ca/…/nintendo-joy-con-controller-lawsui…

Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 22:15 collapse

Yeah, but that’s in Canada. Unlike the US, they don’t let companies get away with LITERALLY everything yet. Good on them for staying sane on top of the asylum though…

morphballganon@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 19:37 next collapse

What is Hall Effect?

sleep_deprived@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 20:05 collapse

It’s a way to detect which way the stick is pointing using magnets. It’s way more accurate and incredibly reliable.

9point6@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 20:54 collapse

Also because the moving parts don’t actually make contact with the sensors, the wear issues that affect joycons basically don’t exist

Engywuck@lemm.ee on 08 Jan 2024 10:46 collapse

HI! My son just received a Nintendo Switch for Xmas. Would you mint telling me more about those Hall Effect stick i.e., brand/model? It’d be interesting to know hot to get them “just in case”. Thanks a lot in advance!

garretble@lemmy.world on 13 Jan 2024 05:31 collapse

Hello! I just remembered your message.

Here’s an article about the ones I bought (though I bought them through another site besides Amazon because I’m not an Amazon fan.

Anyway, the process is pretty easy, though there are some smallish cables to be careful about.

polygon.com/…/nintendo-switch-joy-con-drift-gulik…

Engywuck@lemm.ee on 13 Jan 2024 06:59 collapse

Hey, thanks a lot. I’m not an Amazon fan as well, so I’d buy them elsewhere when/if needed.

whileloop@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 18:38 next collapse

Two things I notice

would eliminate stick drift almost entirely

I thought Hall effect sensors didn’t drift at all?

Second, I’m wondering what exactly Nintendo is patenting here, since Hall effect sensors are nothing new.

dual_sport_dork@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 19:13 next collapse

Yeah, I’m pretty sure they would not be able to patent Hall effect sensors. About a zillion other vendors would be able to claim prior art, especially considering they’ve been a commercial product for precisely this application for literal decades. The Gravis Stinger leaps to mind, which is so damn old it connects to a 9 pin serial port.

Nintendo is either dumb (unlikely) or doing something different (more likely).

Paradox@lemdro.id on 10 Sep 2023 06:26 collapse

They don’t get sensor drift, but if the mechanical centering of the stick is sub par, you can get mechanical drift. The N64 is a good example. Flawless sensors, shitty mechanical construction

gamer@lemm.ee on 09 Sep 2023 18:46 next collapse

I’ll believe it when I see it. Nintendo are cheap bastards, and if they fix the drift issue then they’ll likely cause it to fail prematurely somewhere else. Maybe the rubber will be cheaper so that it wears down and has to be replaced anyways? Or the plastic will be thinner so it cracks sooner, etc.

echo64@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 19:49 next collapse

Also if they wanted to fix it for their next console, then they could have fixed it for this console. Hall effect isn’t some new technology, the dreamcast controller had it.

generalpotato@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 22:25 collapse

I’m betting on sticky buttons or triggers.

Nintendo deserves class action here tbh.

Sniper@lemmy.world on 10 Sep 2023 05:41 collapse

there was a class action lawsuit about this… all it resulted in was nintendo having to provide free repairs to joycons… that eventually will start drifting again

ono@lemmy.ca on 09 Sep 2023 18:54 next collapse

Glancing over the patent, I don’t think Hall effect sensors are used here. Note especially the use of a fluid, and the presence of variable resistors (parts that can wear out in current-gen controllers) for each axis.

Instead, this looks like an analog stick force-feedback mechanism that could also be used for automatic re-centering:

Accordingly, in the first example, control of current to be applied to the MRF is performed in the way as described below, thus achieving both presentation of a feeling using the MRF and an initial position restoration operation.

This wouldn’t keep the potentiometers from wearing out, but with the right software, I imagine it could automatically adjust the sticks to compensate for mild drift. (I don’t know if this would work any better than plain old calibration; it’s definitely more complicated.) Also, games could dynamically adjust stick resistance, like the DualSense can adjust trigger resistance, for interactivity/immersion.

I wonder how much this would affect battery life, how long the fluid mechanism would last with normal wear and tear, and how environmentally toxic it will be when it eventually becomes e-waste.

The PDF linked in the article seems to be a scanned image, so control+F doesn’t work, but the text is searchable here: patents.justia.com/patent/20230280850

WetBeardHairs@lemmy.ml on 11 Sep 2023 11:48 collapse

Whoa, that force feedback mechanism sounds really cool! It might not be able to force movement but it would provide resistance to movement. I could imagine it as if your player character is walking into a wall and the joystick wont let you push forward.

cassetti@kbin.social on 09 Sep 2023 19:13 next collapse

Well cool, I hope it does. I'm not a hardcore gamer, but the Nintendo Switch interested me for the occasional mario kart session. But all the Joycon drama scared me off from buying one. I'll hold out for a few more years before splurging - I'm in no rush, I rarely game or watch television anyway lol

blazera@kbin.social on 09 Sep 2023 19:34 next collapse

Switch drift was so bad, im not getting the new switch unless it goes months without drift reports first.

chris@l.roofo.cc on 09 Sep 2023 20:00 collapse

I upgraded my joycons to the guilykit joysticks and they are wonderful. And its not even that difficult. Took me about 30 minutes for both. But it’s a shame that I had to change them at all.

BennyInc@feddit.de on 09 Sep 2023 20:46 collapse

Do Amiibos still work with the new sticks?

darkevilmac@lemmy.zip on 09 Sep 2023 21:10 next collapse

The NFC reader isn’t on the sticks, so I don’t see why they wouldn’t.

BennyInc@feddit.de on 10 Sep 2023 08:13 collapse

I thought they were, since you touch the stick with it.

<img alt="" src="https://feddit.de/pictrs/image/82d8938f-c695-4bc2-97b0-c9cccc48c37f.png">

EldVrangr@lemmy.world on 10 Sep 2023 10:14 collapse

It’s actually around the stick, not in. Check a right joycon teardown, you’ll see the antenna stuck to the inside of the shell.

chris@l.roofo.cc on 09 Sep 2023 21:40 collapse

Yes.

lackthought@lemmy.sdf.org on 09 Sep 2023 19:38 next collapse

does the switch pro controller use different joysticks than the joycons?

my joycons have drift but the pro controller, which I’ve used more often, is perfectly fine

chris@l.roofo.cc on 09 Sep 2023 19:57 next collapse

The technology is fundamentally the same but they are implemented differently. They joycon has less space so they needed a more compact layout. But both use potentiometers.

Vash63@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 19:58 next collapse

No, it’s just vastly larger so the copper contact strips are also larger and wear slower.

BroederJakob@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 22:09 collapse

I bought a pro controller and it had drift out of the box, sent it back immediately and just got a third party Hori controller for half the price

[deleted] on 09 Sep 2023 20:04 next collapse

.

Toad_the_Fungus@kbin.social on 09 Sep 2023 20:27 next collapse

the left joycon on my switch started drifting after a couple of years, meanwhile the gamecube controller ive had and used for about 20 years still works perfectly

nutlink@kbin.social on 09 Sep 2023 20:32 next collapse

I've had my Switch since launch and haven't had any drifting issues. My brothers both had it though, so I think I've just been incredibly lucky.

Viirax@kbin.social on 09 Sep 2023 21:46 collapse

For me the issue was much worse than drift. One of my joy-cons, that were not really used all that much so the "abusing your controllers" would just be false, just decided that it didn't want to work on the Y axis any more, and the quick fix was the add some credit card thick cardboard behind the joystick box. The controllers were just really badly made in the first place.

Paradox@lemdro.id on 09 Sep 2023 21:01 next collapse

Joycon drift, and all other thumbstick drift, is already a solved problem.

  1. Use bushings that actually have some abrasive resistance and aren’t softer than a fingernail.
  2. Use a non-contact based sensor to determine the XY position of the stick. Hall effect, optical, strain gauge, whatever, we’ve had the tech for 50 years.

The reason why they haven’t done this is one very simple reason: $$$

cordlesslamp@lemmy.today on 09 Sep 2023 22:16 collapse

Isn’t the N64 controllers using optical sensor and those are one of the worst controller ever existed?

CanofBeanz@lemmy.world on 09 Sep 2023 22:32 next collapse

N64 does use optical sensors, the n64 stick is actually super precise and doesn’t suffer from drift. The n64 is a goofy controller but it is simply a great and accurate input device, and a lot of the games were really designed with that stick and notches in mind.

But it is made of all plastic and features plastic on plastic moving parts, without lubrication, so it suffers from wear of the plastic. Worn n64 sticks will actually be filled with plastic dust from the stick and gears literally sanding themselves down. The only problem with the controller is the premature wear of the stick.

JokeDeity@lemm.ee on 10 Sep 2023 12:04 collapse

It’s crazy to me that no company ever made a decent 3rd party N64 controller. The 3rd party ones were all as ridiculous as the defaults. Great console that I loved, but would have gotten a lot more out of with better controllers.

Sniper@lemmy.world on 10 Sep 2023 22:15 next collapse

there was a hori n64 controller that looked like a normal double handle controller and it was really good, but it’s crazy expensive these days on ebay. I’ve also heard good things about the new brawl64.

JokeDeity@lemm.ee on 11 Sep 2023 02:22 collapse

The Hori Pad Mini? I had never seen that before, leagues above anything I remember being available at the time. The other looks amazing, definitely a modern controller that I would have killed for back then.

Royal_Bitch_Pudding@lemmy.world on 11 Sep 2023 19:36 collapse

If you’re willing to pay big bucks you can you can pay for replacement parts/module made with steel

Paradox@lemdro.id on 10 Sep 2023 03:16 next collapse

N64’s issues came from the bushings wearing out, the sensors were still very good

Royal_Bitch_Pudding@lemmy.world on 11 Sep 2023 19:36 collapse

Primarily the plastic bowl

Paradox@lemdro.id on 12 Sep 2023 17:47 collapse

Yup. If they’d just made the bowl out of something OTHER than ABS, they would have been good. Delrin, PTFE, even a thin layer of brass or broze, and those controllers wouldn’t have had anywhere near the amount of issues they’re known for having.

There are third-party manufacturers who sell replacement bowls and sticks, made from everything from POM to steel.

Sniper@lemmy.world on 10 Sep 2023 05:35 next collapse

the reason the n64 sticks suck is down to the stick tension construction and not really the sensing mechanism. Pretty much the thumbstick was pressed against a plastic bowl that wore away into white dust through use, making it floppy. it didn’t really have anything to do with the fact that it was an optical stick

altima_neo@lemmy.zip on 10 Sep 2023 10:10 collapse

The sensors on the N64 are basically the same kind you’d find in a mouse wheel. They work fine.

The crap part is the physical construction. There’s a lot of parts that wear down with use and cause the joystick to become loose due to the plastics wearing away.

ALERT@sh.itjust.works on 09 Sep 2023 21:21 next collapse

www.gulikit.com/productinfo/737791.html mic drop.

bitwolf@lemmy.one on 10 Sep 2023 22:39 next collapse

Man if they did a DualSense style controller with the solid l/r1 and a touchpad for htpc use I’d be all over it.

I might just get one anyway as a backup but they’re really close to the ultimate controller with the kingkong

WetBeardHairs@lemmy.ml on 11 Sep 2023 11:50 collapse

You missed this www.gulikit.com/productinfo/945307.html

SHOW_ME_YOUR_ASSHOLE@lemm.ee on 11 Sep 2023 17:57 collapse

I installed these on my wife’s joycons because she mashes the sticks like Gail the Snail. So far no issues with drift! The kit comes with all the tools you need to do the swap so it’s very straightforward.

Dick_Justice@lemmy.world on 10 Sep 2023 00:09 next collapse

I lost four sets of Joycon to drift. I even sent two in to be “repaired”. Talking to support was worthless - I’m convinced that the people I spoke to had never seen or used a Switch before. I don’t think they did anything other than calibrate them and send them back. I ended up buying a 20 pair of knockoff Joycon that have worked perfectly ever since.

deft@ttrpg.network on 10 Sep 2023 04:38 next collapse

what brand?

Dick_Justice@lemmy.world on 11 Sep 2023 11:25 collapse

My old Amazon order says Vivefox, but they don’t seem to be for sale anymore. I’m pretty sure at the time there were a bunch of companies offering the same ones, like a Chinese dropship kind of thing.

Sniper@lemmy.world on 10 Sep 2023 05:40 collapse

repairing joycon drift is super easy. ifixit.com and the joystick modules are 5 bucks on amazon. People need to lose this fear over opening and repairing their own electronics.

rikudou@lemmings.world on 10 Sep 2023 09:53 next collapse

Why, though? Let them fix it, if they’re selling broken. Especially here in Europe they have to fix it within a mandatory 2-year warranty.

Sniper@lemmy.world on 10 Sep 2023 22:09 next collapse

Cause i’m never gonna let them fix it themselves after they lost one of my ($40) joycons then threw their hands up and said it was my fault. Plus it takes them 3 weeks to do it anyway which is a long time without the games console I paid for

Engywuck@lemm.ee on 08 Jan 2024 10:50 collapse

It’s 3 year in Spain, since Jan 2022 (just adding info).

tal@kbin.social on 20 Sep 2023 04:03 collapse

A bunch of controllers have extremely obnoxious security bits required. I had to get two separate bit sets to open a bunch of controllers.

Zellith@kbin.social on 10 Sep 2023 03:47 next collapse

I fixed my drift with a small piece of cardboard. I figure Nintendo could have eliminated some drift by increasing the material thickness in the cad file they use. They just choose not to.

Destraight@lemm.ee on 10 Sep 2023 05:19 next collapse

Yeah?!?! You think so huh? I’m holding my breath on this one and keeping my interests in other game pads like ASUS ROG one, or the one that Logitech is making

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 10 Sep 2023 10:10 next collapse

None of my PS4, 5 or Switch controllers have had any drift. I even used the Joycons in Ringfit for ages, and I was sure that spending months being strapped to my leg would bugger it up.

I’m not sure if I’m the luckiest person on Earth, I just don’t use them enough, or others are doing something I’m not (smoking or vaping are possibilities here, along with greasy food fingers).

JokeDeity@lemm.ee on 10 Sep 2023 12:02 next collapse

Title seems odd, hall effects already exist, they aren’t creating something new. Also, love my DS5 to death, best controller I’ve ever used.

Cethin@lemmy.zip on 11 Sep 2023 04:30 next collapse

I think it’s saying a patent about hall effect sensors specifically relating to Nintendo and Switch style implementations. Obviously it’s not for the concept at large that’s been around for decades.

Underwaterbob@lemm.ee on 11 Sep 2023 04:45 collapse

I loved my Dualsense too, and then the left stick started drifting so badly, it’s completely unusable now. It’s only about a year old, too. I blame Sekiro. Both my DS4s still work fine though, and they’ve seen much more use and abuse.

delitomatoes@lemm.ee on 11 Sep 2023 08:38 next collapse

You don’t have to dodge in Sekiro, just stand there and parry everything.

Underwaterbob@lemm.ee on 11 Sep 2023 09:21 collapse

True, but you still do a lot of moving around with the left stick. And when you’re stressed out about imminent death at any moment, that can be hard on the sticks.

I loved Sekiro! My first time through the game, I probably died on that first miniboss a hundred times. On NG+, I got to and killed Lady Butterfly without dying once. What an amazing game. I should probably go back and finish up NG+ once Elden Ring lets go of me.

HeyJoe@lemmy.world on 11 Sep 2023 11:57 next collapse

Ps5 controller was just as bad… I’m on my 3rd now and most of my friends are on their 2nd. I also had 1 switch controller go bad as well, but I also don’t play switch as much. This entire generation had the best controllers but also the worst problems I have ever had. Prior to these 2 systems I have never had a controller break before and I’m going back to original NES days.

Underwaterbob@lemm.ee on 14 Sep 2023 05:27 collapse

I was talking about the PS5 controller. My DS4s (the PS4 controller) are holding up much better. At least the internals. The rubber on the sticks wore off, and I had to replace the tops. That was much easier than the 14 contacts-per-stick I have to de-and-re-solder on the Dualsense (PS5 controller) when I work up the courage to try that.

tal@kbin.social on 20 Sep 2023 04:01 collapse

I loved my Dualsense too, and then the left stick started drifting so badly, it’s completely unusable now. It’s only about a year old, too

I really think that something changed with a major potentiometer manufacturer in the past few years. I don't recall stick drift on a PS2 controller that I used for many years, but I've seen it on a number of controllers from different vendors recently.

Only thing I can think of other than recent hardware problems is that maybe the controller hardware imposed a certain amount of deadzone at one point in time and stopped doing so in newer gamepads, and that masked the drift.

Underwaterbob@lemm.ee on 20 Sep 2023 06:10 collapse

I really think that something changed with a major potentiometer manufacturer in the past few years.

I’ve heard a lot of hearsay that that is the case. Tech savvy people have taken apart some sticks and say that analog stick quality has taken a nosedive in recent years. Maybe it is just the effect of this sort of thing being discussed on the Internet more often, but I don’t doubt the veracity. I’ve had a few older controllers that I retired because of external wear whose internals were totally fine. Seems like controllers like Dualsense and particularly Switch Joycons are just poorly made.

mlg@lemmy.world on 11 Sep 2023 04:04 next collapse

I guess they finally found a cheap supplier for magnets so they can save that on what additional whopping 5 cents per stick production cost.

electrogamerman@lemmy.world on 11 Sep 2023 10:23 next collapse

I have had this problem like 3 times, I have sent my joycons for repair and I always get new ones. Not sure how Nintendo is making money out of this.

Epicurus0319@sopuli.xyz on 12 Sep 2023 06:27 next collapse

I hear you can get a replacement digital stick on amazon for the existing switch consoles. If the white ones that came with my oled switch ever get that drifting problem, I’m gonna buy one of those replacement stick components and send it and the drifting joycon to a tech repair shop I know of (that guy might have repaired like 200 of those already, pretty much everyone in my area these days owns a Switch). I don’t wanna risk shorting out a $70 controller doing it by myself

ICastFist@programming.dev on 13 Sep 2023 16:15 collapse

Oh, you mean the problem they refused to acknowledge that was very common for a number of years? I wish I could get a refund or replacement on my 3 OFFICIAL NINTENDO controllers that suffer from drift. But alas, I don’t live where they do business “legally”