Nintendo on Wednesday introduced a new line of interactive DIY cardboard ... the Switch and the Joy-Con controllers can interact with the creations (which are called Toy-Cons).
Interestingly, Nakamura highlights how poor sales in Nintendo Labo in particular, the cardboard toy add-on that makes use of the Switch and its Joy-Cons, has been the year's biggest disappointment.
Not so with Nintendo Labo ($60 and up), a set of kits allowing DIY-inclined gamers to construct their own cardboard controllers for the company’s grab-and-go Switch console. Called Toy-Cons ...
Nintendo revealed the Nintendo Switch 2 yesterday, but beyond showing off the console ... Each Labo kit was a collection of so-called “Toy-Cons,” which would be assembled out of flat-packed cardboard ...
Nintendo Labo didn’t set the ... Each Labo kit was a collection of so-called “Toy-Cons,” which would be assembled out of flat-packed cardboard following an interactive instruction manual ...