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Switch charging time is 3 hours, non-removable battery

Nerazar

Member
Hey stranger...dont tell it to anbody...but i bet you can play while you charge.

It is confirmed that you can play while you charge.

The battery time is indeed not too great and very Japan-oriented where you usually have 90 minute commutes in one direction, so 3 hours of commuting every day... but I can understand their decision.

I mean: you take the device with you, you play while commuting and when you return, you switch to TV mode. That's a fairly reasonable assumption regarding the playstyle of people.

You leave the device at the dock over night and tadaa - it is fully charged again.

From a game perspective, it is quite amazing that you can have massive open-world games like Zelda or Xenoblade on the go at that quality level - no other mobile device offers that. So the battery lifetime is OK and will certainly be improved upon in the years to come.
 

TechnicPuppet

Nothing! I said nothing!
The thing is with my mobile phone if I catch it at 1% and plug it into a 2A portable charger or the wall . No matter what I'm doing I can keep doing it. It will charge, though slower.

Is that going to be the case with this. Will i be draining the battery quicker than I can get it in even when plugged into a wall socket? Looks like it if playing a game that utilises it's capabilities.
 
This post is telling me then that this system was an awful idea from a conceptual standpoint. If this is the best they can do, then their best isn't good enough.

Specifically because of the 3 - 6 hour battery time? Because the 3DS had a battery life of 3 - 5 hours, and the New 3DS was 3.5 - 6 hours. They also took almost 3 hours to fully charge. Were they also awful ideas from a conceptual standpoint?

It's fascinating to see so many people losing their minds over this, convincing themselves and each other that the battery life of the Switch is a problem when it's been the norm for handhelds since the DSi launched in 2008.
 

RiggyRob

Member
3 hours battery life isn't terrible, but not being able to switch the battery out for a bigger capacity version is dissapointing.
 
It's 3 hours to charge from 0 to 100% in sleep mode, am I right? That could mean basically no charging at all if plugged while playing at max settings.
 
The hell? lol

Not really that surprising considering the size of the global market that shops on eBay. Buyers could live in a country where the Switch is not officially released and no online retailer would ship to their country (or accept their credit card), eBay solves that problem as there are sellers willing to ship internationally.

Or even rich domestic buyers for whom money is no object and they'd rather spend a few minutes to secure one on eBay for a markup rather than spend hours trying to get a preorder at Amazon at 3AM before the F5-ing horde grab them all in minutes.
 

dark10x

Digital Foundry pixel pusher
OK, so...the battery life is actually pretty much on par with the original 3DS, right?

I simply hope that it handles sleep mode more efficiently. The Vita can literally last for months in sleep but 3DS is dead in a matter of days even with all wireless communications disabled.
 

MuchoMalo

Banned
4300/3000 * 90 = 129 mins, so we'd expect something closer to two hours for the switch.

If you use the oneplus 3 as a reference the calculation comes out to 130 mins.

Was that 3 hour charge time while the switch was on standby, or while being used?

Qualcomm's proprietary Quick Charge is a bit faster than the USB-C standard. Nintendo is using a Tegra SoC, so it obviously can't use the same Quick Charge that all of your phones use.

In other words, GAF is spoiled again unless you feel that Nintendo should have made a proprietary fast charging solution.

Edit: Let me update the list of what GAF expected out of this:

$200
1080p or better screen
Tiny bezels
Performance on-par with Xbone
6-8+ hour battery life
6000+ mAh battery
Less than 1-hour full charge time with Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 even though it's using Tegra because GAF logic
Super thin
Somehow catching up to PS4 in terms of third-party support in one fell swoop
A built-in 1TB HDD
Rewritable game cards
All games sold for $20-40
 
Specifically because of the 3 - 6 hour battery time? Because the 3DS had a battery life of 3 - 5 hours, and the New 3DS was 3.5 - 6 hours. They also took almost 3 hours to fully charge. Were they also awful ideas from a conceptual standpoint?
Was the 3DS's and New 3DS's main selling point that it could run a game that only got 3 hours of battery life? That's the difference. The Switch is being sold as a portable The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild type platform. That console game in a portable form factor means that the Switch will hover at the lower end of the battery life range.

If you want 6 hours of battery on the Switch you are going to be playing things like 1,2, Switch. However I seriously doubt many people would buy the Switch for a game like that.
 

John Wick

Member
No! There must be nintendo hate by people who have no clue about technology at all!
Come on people. Nintendo put in the best battery they could for the price they aimed at. It's actually a pretty good battery for a tablet style device.

No they didn't. They should have had fast charge. The battery would have been better if it was double the size. That way at least you'd get at least 6 hours of game time from a single charge. Obviously it's take longer to charge but worth it for the extra gaming time.
 

Station42

Member
Let me update the list of what GAF expected out of this:

$200
1080p or better screen
Tiny bezels
Performance on-par with Xbone
6-8+ hour battery life
6000+ mAh battery
Less than 1-hour full charge time with Qualcomm Quick Charge 3.0 even though it's using Tegra because GAF logic
Super thin
Somehow catching up to PS4 in terms of third-party support in one fell swoop
A built-in 1TB HDD
Rewritable game cards
All games sold for $20-40

It's more like – "at least one of those"
 

nynt9

Member
It's more like – "at least one of those"

Exactly. Right now we have an expensive system that is not very powerful that has a short battery life and takes a while to charge, with virtually no third party support from the west. At least if one of those was different it would be an easier pill to swallow.
 

spekkeh

Banned
I got 4 and a half hours with flight mode on and brightness set to 30% on my last flight from Malaysia to Seoul (6 hour flight). I remember timing this because I spent the rest of my flight finishing up a novel with 25 minute pomodoros. However, I'm not sure if I started with a full charge because I left it on standby for ages (Vita has tremendous standby times).

Not bad for a device released in late 2011.
I mean that's not bad, but in full power mode it's also a little bit over three hours max. Nintendo Switch' battery life seems to be pretty comparable to Vita and 3DS, but with a bigger screen and full console games. Yet somehow calling it a portable is a stretch. People are just shitposting now, it's ridiculous. Yeah 10 hours would be better, but that hasn't been the norm for some time now.
 

Kssio_Aug

Member
That's one of the most disappointing aspects of Switch. If they chose to go portable route and turn the console power down, they should have thought of a better solution for battery. 2.5 ~ 3 hours while playing is really bad. And where I live Nintendo does not support with anything, so I can't easily buy their accessories and neither contact them in case of a battery issue. So fucking bad...
 

spekkeh

Banned
No they didn't. They should have had fast charge. The battery would have been better if it was double the size. That way at least you'd get at least 6 hours of game time from a single charge. Obviously it's take longer to charge but worth it for the extra gaming time.
THEY HAVE FAST CHARGE AAAAH
 

Kssio_Aug

Member
I mean that's not bad, but in full power mode it's also a little bit over three hours max. Nintendo Switch' battery life seems to be pretty comparable to Vita and 3DS, but with a bigger screen and full console games. Yet somehow calling it a portable is a stretch. People are just shitposting now, it's ridiculous. Yeah 10 hours would be better, but that hasn't been the norm for some time now.

With N3DS XL I can play at about 2~3 hours in one day, and the next day play about the same again. Just then I have to plug it to recharge so I could use the next day. I'm damn sure my 3DS has never ran out of battery in only 2~3 hours of usage.
 

Wallach

Member
No they didn't. They should have had fast charge. The battery would have been better if it was double the size. That way at least you'd get at least 6 hours of game time from a single charge. Obviously it's take longer to charge but worth it for the extra gaming time.

what fuckin' device has an ~8,500 mAh battery, this isn't a tesla
 

axisofweevils

Holy crap! Today's real megaton is that more than two people can have the same first name.
I don't see the problem. I always play my handhelds plugged in to the mains at home. Why would Switch be any different.
 

Sesuadra

Unconfirmed Member
So come into this thread I read the OP, see the 3 hours charge time, think "that's pretty reasonable", and see that they're using a 4310 mAh battery, which is on the top end of what I would have expected. Good stuff.

And then I start reading the replies... holy hell. I know neogaf has a reputation for over-reacting to things, but this thread is just straight up nuts. Go outside, take a walk, have a breath of fresh air, and when you've calmed down you can come back and we can actually look at the facts.

You're back? Great, nice day outside, isn't it? Okay, now let's talk batteries.

Battery Size

At 4310 mAh, Switch has by far the highest-capacity battery of any gaming device ever made. Here's what's currently out there:

3DS / 2DS - 1300 mAh
New 3DS - 1400 mAh
(New) 3DS XL - 1750 mAh
PS Vita - 2200 mAh

That's about twice the capacity of PS Vita or almost three and a half times the capacity of the 3DS or 2DS.

Now, you're surely saying "but X phone or Y tablet has such-and-such a capacity, Nintendo must be able to fit more in there!", but I'm willing to be X phone and Y tablet aren't actively cooled. A typical phone or tablet these days is basically a battery with some electronics and a screen attached. For a phone the battery could account for 60-70% of the internal volume, and it can be even higher for tablets.

Nintendo doesn't have the luxury of dedicating so much internal space to batteries, because it has to fit a fan and heatsink in there, which likely occupies as much as half the space between the screen and the rear of the case. Have a look at this rear-view photo of the Switch:



The blue box I've included is pretty much the best-case-scenario for how much space Nintendo can allocate to the battery in Switch. If you look at the fan vents at the top and bottom of the unit you can see where the heatsink and fan are going to sit (and I've been pretty conservative with the red box for this, as I'm not even including the area around the third vent to the lower right). Then on the left we've got space taken up by the game card slot, microSD slot, kickstand, and likely part of the logic board (which will overlap the cooling system).

There's no space for a bigger battery. The reason I say 4310 mAh is at the top end of what I would have expected is because there's just nowhere to put anything bigger. A 4310 mAh battery is basically Nintendo squeezing as big a battery as they possibly can in there. Quote me on this, when we see teardowns in March there isn't going to be some big gap where they could have put a bigger battery. They've squeezed in as much as they can without increasing the physical size of the device.

Charging

Regarding the "Switch doesn't do quick charging" claim, let's first do some basic maths. A 4310 mAh battery, assuming a standard 3.7V, comes to 15.95 Wh. For that battery to charge from 0 to 100% in 3 hours, then at an absolute minimum, it would have to be charging at a rate of 15.95/3 = 5.3W. Standard USB 2 provides 2.5W of power, so it's physically impossible for Switch to charge so quickly without some form of "quick charging".

However, as several people have already pointed out, batteries don't charge at a flat rate from 0 to 100%, they charge more quickly for the first ~80%, and much more slowly for the final ~20%. It's quite likely that Switch's peak charging rate is anywhere from 10-15W, which is, once again, far more than a standard USB 2 charger would provide.

Finally, we have Nintendo's FCC listing for Switch last month, which gave us these little nuggets of information:



See that bit where it says that the (USB-C) AC adaptor can output DC at 15V? That, folks, means that the system uses USB Power Delivery Revision 2.0 Version 1.2 or later. Or, in layman's terms, quick charging.

So, unless Nintendo have broken both the laws of thermodynamics and some regular human laws by lying to the FCC (although I'd imagine they'd get into more trouble over the former), Switch is most definitely capable of quick charging by any definition.

Regarding the total charging time of 3 hours, this is pretty typical for a gaming device. The 3DS takes even longer at 3 and a half hours for a full charge, while the PS Vita takes 2 hours and 40 mins. And in both cases we're talking about far smaller batteries than Switch has.

People also need to keep in mind once again that li-ion batteries are much slower to charge for the last 20% or so. This is why phone manufacturers always give specs like "charges to 80% in an hour", and leave out the fact that the remaining 20% takes another hour. Anantech provides some useful charging graphs in their smartphone reviews (e.g. OnePlus 3T, Honor 8), and if you look through them you'll notice a trend that charging to 80% typically takes only half the time of charging fully to 100%. This is going to vary a little bit depending on the battery and charging tech used, but it's usually around that ratio.

Translating to Switch, what we're probably looking at is the device charging to 80% battery in 90 minutes or so. Which, for me at least, is pretty reasonable. Yeah, they probably could have got it down to 60 minutes by using a more expensive battery, more expensive power ICs and a more expensive charger, but I doubt I'll ever be in a situation where that's the difference between my Switch having a usable amount of charge or not.

TL:DR

- Switch's battery is far bigger than any other gaming device
- Switch's battery is as big as they could possibly fit in there given the active cooling
- Switch definitely uses quick charging (source: FCC & James Clerk Maxwell)
- Switch probably charges to ~80% battery in about 90 minutes
thank you for that incredible break down.
 

jts

...hate me...
I guess this is as good of a thread as any to ask and discuss this.

Does it only charge from the bottom? Is it not able to charge while using the kickstand? It feels that way, but I hope I'm wrong.

The Wii U Gamepad could charge from both the bottom and the top, that made it able to use with any stand/dock and still get charged.
 

spekkeh

Banned
With N3DS XL I can play at about 2~3 hours in one day, and the next day play about the same again. Just then I have to plug it to recharge so I could use the next day. I'm damn sure my 3DS has never ran out of battery in only 2~3 hours of usage.
3DS is slated at 3-5 hours. Switch is 2.5-6.5. Thats the same range. I'm sure a revision in Switch's fourth year will also add a bit more battery life.
 
The battery can be a problem, especially for those folks who'll use the Switch primarily as what it truly is, a handheld. I'm not too worried about it since I have a hefty Anker charger (powercore+ 26800) and will be relying on that to keep me topped while commuting to and from work.

Having said that, with most things Switch I feel Nintendo could have done more to shore up the battery life and tbh I didn't expect much from the battery life anyhow.
 

flohen95

Member
That's one of the most disappointing aspects of Switch. If they chose to go portable route and turn the console power down, they should have thought of a better solution for battery. 2.5 ~ 3 hours while playing is really bad. And where I live Nintendo does not support with anything, so I can't easily buy their accessories and neither contact them in case of a battery issue. So fucking bad...

It's offically 2,5 - 6 hours. For comparison, the PS Vita has 3 - 5 hours of gameplay time and for a full charge it needs 2,75 hours (It's battery is also not officially removable, as in you have to void your warranty to access the battery). The 3DS charges for 3,5 hours to 100% and lasts 3 - 5 hours for 3DS games (8 for DS games).

The Switch is completely in line with other portable game consoles, except that it's a lot stronger. I mean, it's fine to be disappointed with that, but I'm not really sure what people expected and why there's such an outcry over things that could and should have easily been anticipated.
 

-MB-

Member
So come into this thread I read the OP, see the 3 hours charge time, think "that's pretty reasonable", and see that they're using a 4310 mAh battery, which is on the top end of what I would have expected. Good stuff.

And then I start reading the replies... holy hell. I know neogaf has a reputation for over-reacting to things, but this thread is just straight up nuts. Go outside, take a walk, have a breath of fresh air, and when you've calmed down you can come back and we can actually look at the facts.

You're back? Great, nice day outside, isn't it? Okay, now let's talk batteries.

Battery Size

At 4310 mAh, Switch has by far the highest-capacity battery of any gaming device ever made. Here's what's currently out there:

3DS / 2DS - 1300 mAh
New 3DS - 1400 mAh
(New) 3DS XL - 1750 mAh
PS Vita - 2200 mAh

That's about twice the capacity of PS Vita or almost three and a half times the capacity of the 3DS or 2DS.

Now, you're surely saying "but X phone or Y tablet has such-and-such a capacity, Nintendo must be able to fit more in there!", but I'm willing to be X phone and Y tablet aren't actively cooled. A typical phone or tablet these days is basically a battery with some electronics and a screen attached. For a phone the battery could account for 60-70% of the internal volume, and it can be even higher for tablets.

Nintendo doesn't have the luxury of dedicating so much internal space to batteries, because it has to fit a fan and heatsink in there, which likely occupies as much as half the space between the screen and the rear of the case. Have a look at this rear-view photo of the Switch:



The blue box I've included is pretty much the best-case-scenario for how much space Nintendo can allocate to the battery in Switch. If you look at the fan vents at the top and bottom of the unit you can see where the heatsink and fan are going to sit (and I've been pretty conservative with the red box for this, as I'm not even including the area around the third vent to the lower right). Then on the left we've got space taken up by the game card slot, microSD slot, kickstand, and likely part of the logic board (which will overlap the cooling system).

There's no space for a bigger battery. The reason I say 4310 mAh is at the top end of what I would have expected is because there's just nowhere to put anything bigger. A 4310 mAh battery is basically Nintendo squeezing as big a battery as they possibly can in there. Quote me on this, when we see teardowns in March there isn't going to be some big gap where they could have put a bigger battery. They've squeezed in as much as they can without increasing the physical size of the device.

Charging

Regarding the "Switch doesn't do quick charging" claim, let's first do some basic maths. A 4310 mAh battery, assuming a standard 3.7V, comes to 15.95 Wh. For that battery to charge from 0 to 100% in 3 hours, then at an absolute minimum, it would have to be charging at a rate of 15.95/3 = 5.3W. Standard USB 2 provides 2.5W of power, so it's physically impossible for Switch to charge so quickly without some form of "quick charging".

However, as several people have already pointed out, batteries don't charge at a flat rate from 0 to 100%, they charge more quickly for the first ~80%, and much more slowly for the final ~20%. It's quite likely that Switch's peak charging rate is anywhere from 10-15W, which is, once again, far more than a standard USB 2 charger would provide.

Finally, we have Nintendo's FCC listing for Switch last month, which gave us these little nuggets of information:



See that bit where it says that the (USB-C) AC adaptor can output DC at 15V? That, folks, means that the system uses USB Power Delivery Revision 2.0 Version 1.2 or later. Or, in layman's terms, quick charging.

So, unless Nintendo have broken both the laws of thermodynamics and some regular human laws by lying to the FCC (although I'd imagine they'd get into more trouble over the former), Switch is most definitely capable of quick charging by any definition.

Regarding the total charging time of 3 hours, this is pretty typical for a gaming device. The 3DS takes even longer at 3 and a half hours for a full charge, while the PS Vita takes 2 hours and 40 mins. And in both cases we're talking about far smaller batteries than Switch has.

People also need to keep in mind once again that li-ion batteries are much slower to charge for the last 20% or so. This is why phone manufacturers always give specs like "charges to 80% in an hour", and leave out the fact that the remaining 20% takes another hour. Anantech provides some useful charging graphs in their smartphone reviews (e.g. OnePlus 3T, Honor 8), and if you look through them you'll notice a trend that charging to 80% typically takes only half the time of charging fully to 100%. This is going to vary a little bit depending on the battery and charging tech used, but it's usually around that ratio.

Translating to Switch, what we're probably looking at is the device charging to 80% battery in 90 minutes or so. Which, for me at least, is pretty reasonable. Yeah, they probably could have got it down to 60 minutes by using a more expensive battery, more expensive power ICs and a more expensive charger, but I doubt I'll ever be in a situation where that's the difference between my Switch having a usable amount of charge or not.

TL:DR

- Switch's battery is far bigger than any other gaming device
- Switch's battery is as big as they could possibly fit in there given the active cooling
- Switch definitely uses quick charging (source: FCC & James Clerk Maxwell)
- Switch probably charges to ~80% battery in about 90 minutes



Don't forget that Nintendo likes to make their hardware sturdy to accomodate abuse by children without it instantly breaking down, and that goes somewhat for the battery too. DS/3DS/WiiU gamepad batteries are usually encased to as opposed to internal batteries in phones, which are flimsy on their own.
 

Cloukyo

Banned
Wait, how many people were actually going to play this giant in pubilc? Do you guys really ave three hour train journeys?

I like the feeling of having a console in my hands in bed, so I can just charge while playing, but even then, how many people play for three hours straight? You can charge when you're done with it.

Edit: To elaborate - I don't know why you'd play the console's biggest hitters away from a mains plug socket. I get that the marketing is showing people playing mario kart in a car journey, but lets be real. You won't be playing Zelda, or Splatoon, when you're in a car, or on the train. Same with arms or the like. This console is still largely made to be a home console. Most likely we'll get another DS soon.
 
Was the 3DS's and New 3DS's main selling point that it could run a game that only got 3 hours of battery life? That's the difference. The Switch is being sold as a portable The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild type platform. That console game in a portable form factor means that the Switch will hover at the lower end of the battery life range.

Yes! The more detailed games led to 3+ hour gaming periods, on both the 3DS and New 3DS. Seriously, unless you also think the 3DS range is garbage because of the battery usage, you're losing your head over absolutely nothing. The vast majority of the time you play a portable game for more than three hours is when you're playing at home anyway, so you just stick in a cable while playing and the problem is solved.

Even the Vita only offers 3-5 hours of gaming time, worse than the Switch, and the vast majority agree the hardware was amazing - the software let that device down. It's bizarre seeing so many people suddenly decide 3-6 hours gaming time for a portable device is a massive issue. Are you jumping on a bandwagon or just looking for problems with this device for some kind of agenda? Because the battery isn't the problem you're looking for.

What the upset people wanted:
PS4 quality visuals or better, portable at 1080p, with 5-10 hours of battery life, and a free online service, at a price point of $250. Hmmm...
 
Can someone tell me if you can connect the (I presume USB) adapter that comes in the box directly with the tablet/Switch unit? Or can you only charge the Switch via the dock? I'm confused about this.
 

sirap

Member
Wait, how many people were actually going to play this giant in pubilc? Do you guys really ave three hour train journeys?

I like the feeling of having a console in my hands in bed, so I can just charge while playing, but even then, how many people play for three hours straight? You can charge when you're done with it.

Edit: To elaborate - I don't know why you'd play the console's biggest hitters away from a mains plug socket. I get that the marketing is showing people playing mario kart in a car journey, but lets be real. You won't be playing Zelda, or Splatoon, when you're in a car, or on the train. Same with arms or the like. This console is still largely made to be a home console. Most likely we'll get another DS soon.

Why not? I played OOTD3D religiously on planes and bus rides. Same thing with AAA titles too, I play them on a pimped out Blade and Elite Controller when travelling.

Just because you don't play these games outside doesn't mean everyone else don't either.
 

Blues1990

Member
With the Wii U Gamepad, you could order a replaceable battery (which is what I did when the High Capacity Battery), get a phillips screwdriver to uncover the back of the plate, and replace it yourself.

It just sounds like it's going to cause an inconvenience for me with the Nintendo Switch, but whatever.
 

jts

...hate me...
Can someone tell me if you can connect the (I presume USB) adapter that comes in the box directly with the tablet/Switch unit? Or can you only charge the Switch via the dock? I'm confused about this.
Yeah, you can. The dock is a USB-C hub that allows charging pass-through. You can plug it directly for the same effect.
 

ItIsOkBro

Member
The thing is with my mobile phone if I catch it at 1% and plug it into a 2A portable charger or the wall . No matter what I'm doing I can keep doing it. It will charge, though slower.

Is that going to be the case with this. Will i be draining the battery quicker than I can get it in even when plugged into a wall socket? Looks like it if playing a game that utilises it's capabilities.
your phone nor the switch should drain when you're plugged in...since it would be running off the power supply
 

Cloukyo

Banned
Why not? I played OOTD3D religiously on planes and bus rides. Same thing with AAA titles too, I play them on a pimped out Blade and Elite Controller when travelling.

Just because you don't play these games outside doesn't mean everyone else don't either.

Ok sure, but you rarely travel for three hours straight right?

I think the assumption is that once you go home you'll dock is straight away, not leave it around like you might do your DS.

So as long as you don't play for more than 3 hours in one go, it isn't a problem.

I don't think many people play for that long?

They shouldn't anyway, you'll get square eyes.
 
I know it's going to cost more, but I'll be honest, USB battery packs are totally a thing. Third party manufacturers will likely make battery extender things as well. mind you, I don't know HOW what with the Switch dock... maybe they'll just make the battery pack super easy t remove? I dunno
 

m4st4

Member
Okay, serious question, I just realized AC adapter that comes along with the package might cause me some minor trouble:

3max.jpg


Since I live in Croatia I may have to automatically buy some sort of universal plug replacement Day 1 amirite? Basically I need to have this:

EU-9v-power-adapter.jpg


Alternatively, I can also charge it while on stand?
 

gafneo

Banned
I'd gladly buy a Switch for hundreds more if it had next Gen battery life. I hate sitting in one place charging portables all day. This alone will set back sales dramatically.
 
Okay, serious question, I just realized AC adapter that comes along with the package might cause me some minor trouble:

3max.jpg


Since I live in Croatia I may have to automatically buy some sort of universal plug replacement Day 1 amirite? Basically I need to have this:

EU-9v-power-adapter.jpg


Alternatively, I can also charge it while on stand?

don't you have universal travel adapter somewhere in your house? since switch is region free, it will be stupid of Nintendo to not provide 110-240V adapter (so that it's usable without transformer)
 

FyreWulff

Member
Okay, serious question, I just realized AC adapter that comes along with the package might cause me some minor trouble:

3max.jpg


Since I live in Croatia I may have to automatically buy some sort of universal plug replacement Day 1 amirite? Basically I need to have this:

EU-9v-power-adapter.jpg


Alternatively, I can also charge it while on stand?

It's a USBC plug on the other end so any USBC charger should work to power the Switch. Your barrel plug there actually won't work.
 
I feel like this won't be a problem since most people can sit it in the dock at night. But I feel like the prolonged charge time is so that the controllers are fully charged as well.
 

DatAhmedz

Member
don't you have universal travel adapter somewhere in your house? since switch is region free, it will be stupid of Nintendo to not provide 110-240V adapter (so that it's usable without transformer)

The voltage is what I'm worried about the most, since we use 240v where I live. Apparently the Wii U was rated at 110v on the brick itself, but it turned out to be 110v-240v internally. I'm hoping it's the same case with the Switch power adapter, considering their approach for region free and whatnot.

I might snag a UK adapter just in case though.

It's a USBC plug on the other end so any USBC charger should work to power the Switch. Your barrel plug there actually won't work.

I'm sure they were talking about the plug type on the brick itself, not the connector.
 
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