Just about 13% (12.56 Million Lite Consoles)Not sure how many of the overall Switch total the Lite accounts for, pretty sure the regular Switch models are by far the most popular, and as both consoles play pretty much all of the Switch software, the point is moot anyway.
So it will still end up on a massive figure without the Lite sales.Just about 13% (12.56 Million Lite Consoles)
You are kind of taking part in the thread as well, but to be honest this should not have even been a question or thread in the first place.if u spend serious time thinking about this question and responding to it then ur kinda pathetic and by kinda i mean very very very pathetic
There is no way the Switch isn't a Mega-hit with or without the lite. It will would still have reaching 100mil sold even if the Lite was never released.So it will still end up on a massive figure without the Lite sales.
Side note: The Switch LIte alone has sole more units than the Wii U. I find that very interesting.
Read this:same internals i dont see why not
The Sega Game Gear was a handheld that had the same exact specs as the Master System. Heck you could've just plugged in Master System cartridges directly into the Game Gear with an official adapter.
Same with the Sega Nomad. Except with the Nomad you didn't need an adapter and could plug Sega Genesis cartridges directly into the Nomad. And the Nomad was the first system that actually switched as you could just plug the system to the TV and play with a regular controller. Sega always ahead of their time.
But all you heard was how the Game Gear and Nomad were colossal failures in comparison to the Game Boy. Sales never got lumped together and were tracked as just handhelds. Even though they were just different form factors of existing hardware.
Double standards for sure.
Not really the same, the Switch lite is pretty much the same console as the regular models, only missing the T.V dock.Read this:
The Sega Game Gear was a handheld that had the same exact specs as the Master System. Heck you could've just plugged in Master System cartridges directly into the Game Gear with an official adapter.
Same with the Sega Nomad. Except with the Nomad you didn't need an adapter and could plug Sega Genesis cartridges directly into the Nomad. And the Nomad was the first system that actually switched as you could just plug the system to the TV and play with a regular controller. Sega always ahead of their time.
But all you heard was how the Game Gear and Nomad were colossal failures in comparison to the Game Boy. Sales never got lumped together and were tracked as just handhelds. Even though they were just different form factors of existing hardware.
Double standards for sure.
Read this: