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ARCHITIZER.COMSuburbia 2.0: Design Solutions for Sustainable Sprawl, From Dead Ends to DestinationsArchitects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work by uploading projects to Architizerand sign up for ourinspirational newsletters.Picket fences, emerald lawns, and colorfully painted houses, neatly arranged in linear and circular rows, were once the hallmarks of the American Dream. In the 1950s, living in the suburbs, far away from the hustle of the bustling city, was a symbol of the ideal life and yet, even back then, the concept of suburbia was always a struggle in architectural debates. The reinforced segregation, the false visions of idyllic domesticity, and the uniform and counter-normative designs posed great challenges for architects dealing with the suburbs.Today, urban sprawl has once again taken center stage in architectural discussions. In this post-pandemic era, the rising housing market, refugee crises and youth unemployment are driving more people toward the outskirts of cities, forcing them into an urban model that does not truly meets their needs. For decades now, suburbs were considered somewhat of a dead zone, where trade, culture and entertainment could be accessed only by commuting to the big city. Still, concepts like the 15-minute city and mixed-use architecture are gradually explored as a means to improve the suburbia model in response to the rapid urban sprawl. Consequently, can the suburbia design be adapted to meet the demands of the future or does the solution lie in abandoning the model altogether?Real de los Reyes by Miguel de la Torre mta+v, Coyoacn, Mexico CityWhat defines a suburb? At its core, the single-family home serves as the fundamental unit of suburbia. The streets, highways, and infrastructural grid shape its most dominant features, while a handful of shopping centers, scattered along the outskirts, provide access to essential goods and community services. But what if we reimagined and redesigned these three defining elements?In the 1920s, Frank Lloyd Wright intensified and extended the single family home. He brought the logic of the skyscraper to the domestic scale, constructing housing units that were arranged around a central core, focusing on shared open spaces and asymmetrical designs that irregularly joined together. One century later, the Real de los Reyes project by Miguel de la Torre mta+v introduces a new model for suburban living.Located in the Coyoacan borough, south Mexico City, this group of houses is situated within a historic colonial district, filled with museums, craft markets and recreational spaces. This multi-unit residency offers an array of multifunctional interior and exterior spaces in multiple levels, accommodating to versatile ways of living. Even through the project is situated within a vibrant communal neighborhood, the design borrows elements from the surrounding context and proposes a micro-community within a thoughtfully structured residential plan.SouthWorks by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates, Ithaca, New YorkIn parallel, SouthWorks by Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates, an adaptive reuse speculative project of the historic Morse Chain Industrial site in Ithaca, showcases the power of mixed-use development and infrastructure. The project spans in nearly two million square feet of research, maker, fabrication, commercial, and public spaces, as well as mixed-income housing, activating the community and its economy, while celebrating its unique industrial history. It features 900 planned units of affordable, workforce, and market rate housing and provides multiple types of transportation options, thus minimizing the need for private vehicles. The project also employs passive design and is supported by on-site geothermal and photovoltaic solar generation.Sitting within a very different context, the 520-acre Downsview Framework Plan by Henning Larsen reimagines the future for the expansive North End neighborhood of Toronto and lays the foundation for a thriving community for generations to come. The project transforms the former Downsview Airport site and surrounding land into a new type of community, by employing climate-responsive design. One hundred acres of green spaces and integrated hydrological elements will become the new infrastructure of the neighborhood, which in turn is comprised of mid-rise residences and repurposed historic buildings found on site. The proposal is inspired by the 15-minute City concept, providing easy access to a network of residential, commercial, retail, institutional and industrial amenities through a short walk, roll, bike, or public transit ride.Downsview Framework Plan by Henning Larsen, Toronto, CanadaIt is not arbitrary that all three proposals are not tabula rasa projects. In the 1950s, the conditions of suburbia were vastly different, with many plots of uninhabited land being available for development without facing any sort of negative criticism. Today, however, architects are preaching about mindful construction and the importance of adaptive reuse, urging developers to take advantage of existing building fabrics in the outskirts of cities. Additionally, the traditional suburbia model has also proved quite unsuccessful, prompting an urgent need for innovative, community-driven alternatives.Frankly, reversing suburbia does not necessarily mean erasing it but rather rethinking its purpose, structure and potential. As cities continue to expand, the challenge lies in transforming suburban landscapes into vibrant, sustainable and inclusive environments. By embracing adaptive reuse, mixed-use developments, and organic infrastructure suburbs can evolve from isolated residential zones into dynamic, self-sufficient communities. These three projects demonstrate that the future of suburbia is not about abandonment, but reinvention where connectivity replaces isolation, density enhances livability, and sustainability drives growth. If urban sprawl is to be addressed effectively, then suburbia must no longer be a relic of the past but a model for the future.Architects: Want to have your project featured? Showcase your work by uploading projects to Architizerand sign up for ourinspirational newsletters.Featured image: LevittownPA, marked as public domain, more details on Wikimedia CommonsThe post Suburbia 2.0: Design Solutions for Sustainable Sprawl, From Dead Ends to Destinations appeared first on Journal.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 157 Visualizações
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GAMINGBOLT.COMHades 2 Will Launch for Switch and Switch 2Hades 2launched in early access as a PC exclusive last year, and developer Supergiant Games has now officially added another couple of target platforms to its plans for the roguelike action title.At the recent Nintendo Direct, it was announced thatHades 2will also release for Nintendo Switch and Nintendo Switch 2. When exactly it will launch for the two Nintendo consoles is unclear. It isnt surprising that the game seems to be prioritizing a Switch release over other consoles, seeing as its predecessor took a similar approach.Meanwhile, on its official website, Supergiant has confirmed that the game will run at 1080p on the Switch 2, and at 60 FPS on both Switch and Switch 2. The studio has also offered a bit of an update on Hades 2slaunch plans. The developer says it has at least one more major update planned for the games ongoing early access period, and that the 1.0 release will follow some time after that.We dont yet have a release date for the full version of Hades 2, the developer writes.The game is currently available in Early Access on computer platforms, and we have at least one more Major Update still to come, so our v1.0 launch will be some time after that. Stay tuned for more details later this year.In our early access review ofHades 2,we awarded it a score of 9/10, saying, Hades 2 isnt just one of the best early access titles right now its also a top-tier rogue-lite experience that fans and newcomers should experience immediately. Read the full review through here.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 133 Visualizações
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GAMINGBOLT.COMBravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Announced as Switch 2 Launch TitleThere has been talk of aBravely Defaultremaster since as far back as 2022, and now, its official. At the recent Nintendo Switch 2 Direct, Square Enix announcedBravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster,an enhanced version of the originalBravely Default, which launched for the 3DS over a decade ago.On top of everything included in the 3DS original, the Switch 2 remaster will tout various other enhancements. Thatll include visual upgrades, a redesigned user interface, the ability to fast-forward through event scenes, two new minigames, retooled network features, and more.The remasters announcement trailer showcases several glimpses of gameplay, showing its classic turn-based combat with a twist, bits and pieces of its world and story, its cast of characters, and more. Check out the trailer below.Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remasterwill release as a Nintendo Switch 2 launch title a couple of months from now, on July 5.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 132 Visualizações
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WWW.GAMEDEVELOPER.COMAustralian studio PlaySide is making layoffs after delivering record revenueThe company has announced a restructuring plan in response to waning contract work, but the news comes just months after it reported record annual revenue of $64.6 million AUD.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 129 Visualizações
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WWW.THEVERGE.COMVerizon now offers a three-year price lock but theres a catchYour plan price isnt the whole story.Verizon is announcing a new price lock policy today, and the timing is probably no coincidence. The company is extending a three-year price guarantee on certain plans, both for new and existing customers. The announcement comes a day after President Trump unveiled sweeping tariffs, and Verizon says its hoping to give customers more predictability in the current economic environment. But the fine print leaves Verizon plenty of wiggle room.The three-year guarantee covers the base charge for your rate plan, but not fees and taxes and you have to be on one of Verizons newer myPlan subscriptions to qualify. That means Verizon can still raise your monthly bill in the form of increased fees, which is what wireless carriers tend to do anyway when they want to charge more. They can also cut your monthly autopay discount in half, or persuade you to move to a pricier plan with the offer of a new phone. There are plenty of levers for companies like Verizon to pull, even with a price lock.The price lock isnt the only new offer on the table, though. Verizon is also throwing in a free phone to new and existing customers. Youll just need to trade in an old Apple, Samsung, or Google phone in any condition and again, youll need to be on a myPlan subscription to take advantage. With plenty of economic uncertainty ahead, a trade-in deal might sound appealing. Just make sure you read the fine print so you know what youre getting into.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 119 Visualizações
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WWW.THEVERGE.COMUniversities are giving up the fight for free speech students aren’tAs the US government launches investigations and threatens to pull federal funding, some elite universities have decided to take the path of least resistance. Colleges across the country have responded to the Trump administrations attacks on diversity programs and student protesters by complying with these anti-woke witch hunts. In recent weeks, university administrators at Columbia University, Johns Hopkins University, and other schools have let the government interfere with entire academic departments, fired professors over allegations of antisemitism lobbed by right-wing groups, and announced their refusal to intervene in immigration arrests on campus.The Trump administration has warned it will yank funding from institutions that it claims have engaged in racial discrimination in the form of diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs and enabled antisemitism by not being hard enough on pro-Palestine protesters. These arent empty threats: in March, the administration rescinded $400 million in funding from Columbia and froze $175 million slated for the University of Pennsylvania over the schools policies on transgender athletes. This week, President Donald Trump paused several dozen grants issued to Princeton University and announced that its reviewing $9 billion in federal grants and contracts awarded to Harvard University. Universities are largely responding to these attacks by preemptively cracking down on free speech. The Rhode Island School of Design shut down an art exhibition which it had previously approved put on by the schools chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine. New York University canceled a talk on USAID cuts over concerns that the topic could be seen as anti-governmental. Yale Law School suspended, and later fired, an international law scholar after an AI-powered right-wing news site falsely accused her of being linked to a Palestinian group under US sanctions. After Trump pulled funding from Columbia, the university agreed to comply with a host of the administrations demands, including completing disciplinary proceedings for student protesters, making changes to its admissions process, banning masks on campus, and placing its Middle East, South Asian, and African Studies department under new supervision.If universities are complying as a protective measure, its not guaranteed to work. When CNN asked if Columbia would get its funds back, Education Secretary Linda McMahon said the university was on the right track but refused to confirm whether the money would be reinstated. She was more blunt in a subsequent interview: They have to abide and comply with the terms that weve set down, she told reporters.Title VI manipulationsAfter years of criticizing universities for their supposed stifling of free speech, conservatives now in power are weaponizing anti-discrimination law to quash student protests and eliminate diversity initiatives.In March, the Department of Education announced it was investigating 45 universities over their involvement with the PhD Project, a program aimed at increasing racial diversity among business school professors. The administration claimed the PhD Projects focus on hiring more professors of color violated Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, and national origin in any programs that receive money from the federal government.The administration is also using Title VI as a cudgel against campus protests. Several universities have been probed by the Justice Department Task Force to Combat Anti-Semitism. The task force, formed in February, has plans to visit at least 10 universities across the country to determine whether they failed to protect Jewish students and faculty members from unlawful discrimination and therefore violated Title VI.The integrity of civic discourse and the freedoms that form the basis of a democratic society are under attack.Columbia, Harvard, and the University of Pennsylvania are among the schools that have been visited by the task force and have had their federal funding pulled as a result. While university administrators have largely complied with the administrations demands, student and faculty groups across the country have pushed back on Trumps campus incursions. Recent lawsuits have challenged Trumps funding freezes and deportation policies on First Amendment grounds, claiming that the administration is retaliating against students constitutionally protected speech. Unsurprisingly, the first of these suits involved Columbia. Last week, a coalition of labor unions sued the Trump administration, alleging that its revocation of Columbias funding violated the First Amendment. Trumps attacks on Columbia were an unprecedented effort to overpower a universitys autonomy and control the thought, association, scholarship, and expression of its faculty and students, the suit, filed in federal court in New York by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and the American Federation of Teachers, claims. Columbia is in the crosshairs because of the Trump administrations disagreement with the perceived political views of students and faculty at the university, the complaint reads. In addition to violating students and facultys right to free speech, the suit argues the Trump administration didnt follow Title VI procedure before pulling the universitys funds. The budget cuts have caused severe and irreparable damage not only to Columbia but also to the broader community, the suit claims, affecting crucial public health efforts including research to prevent Alzheimers disease, to ensure fetal health in pregnant women, and to cure cancer. Worse still, faculty members say, university leadership is capitulating to Trumps demands instead of fighting back.Were seeing university leadership across the country failing to take any action to counter the Trump administrations unlawful assault on academic freedom, Columbia professor Reinhold Martin, who is also the president of Columbia-AAUP, said in a press release. As faculty, we dont have the luxury of inaction. The integrity of civic discourse and the freedoms that form the basis of a democratic society are under attack.Ideological deportationsThe AAUP is suing the Trump administration for using an ideological-deportation policy to chill speech on college campuses, according to a separate suit filed in Massachusetts. That suit, filed on March 28th in a New York federal court alongside the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia and the Middle East Studies Association, alleges that Immigration and Customs Enforcements (ICE) recent arrests of student protesters violate the First Amendment. ICE has arrested at least five students over their alleged involvement in pro-Palestine activism on campus. The government is using an obscure provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 to initiate deportation proceedings against the students. The law, enacted at the height of the McCarthy era, lets the secretary of state declare someone deportable if their presence in the country would compromise a compelling United States foreign policy interest. Secretary of State Marco Rubio has alleged that the students targeted by ICE have expressed support for Hamas, a claim for which the administration has provided next to no evidence.For example, officials with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) claim that Rumeysa Ozturk, a graduate student at Tufts University who was arrested by ICE last week, had engaged in activities in support of Hamas. Ozturk, a Turkish citizen, wrote an opinion piece for the campus newspaper urging the university to acknowledge the Palestinian genocide and divest its endowment from companies with ties to Israel, common demands made by student activists across the country. The essay almost entirely focuses on university procedure and at no point mentions Hamas. But it was cited as an example of Ozturks Anti-Israel Activism by the website Canary Mission, a database that tracks pro-Palestinian students a sentiment it conflates with antisemitism.RelatedOther international students targeted by DHS have left the country. Ranjani Srinivasan, a Columbia student who was in the country on an F-1 visa, fled for Canada after ICE agents showed up to her dorm looking for her. In a statement published on March 22nd, Srinivasan wrote that Columbias administration didnt help her and that the university has been cooperating with ICE instead of protecting its students. Meanwhile, the Justice Department is reportedly investigating whether Columbia officials were harboring and concealing illegal aliens on campus from DHS. Momodou Taal, a Cornell PhD student who sued the Trump administration in March over two executive orders ostensibly related to national security and combating antisemitism on college campuses, also left the United States. In a statement posted on X on Monday, Taal said he hoped his lawsuit would offer reprieve for myself and other students who had been targeted for their activism. But Trump did not want me to have my day in court and sent ICE agents to my home and revoked my visa, Taal wrote.The administrations efforts to arrest student protesters has created a climate of repression and fear on college campuses, the AAUP lawsuit claims. Out of fear that they might be arrested and deported for lawful expression and association, some noncitizen students and faculty have stopped attending public protests or resigned from campus groups that engage in political advocacy.Rubio recently claimed he has revoked visas daily since taking office, rescinding around 300 since January, including of students involved in pro-Palestine protests. The State Department reportedly launched a Catch and Revoke effort in March, which involves AI-assisted reviews of thousands of peoples social media accounts for pro-Palestinian or anti-Israel sentiment. Some universities have chosen to comply with Trumps efforts to deport their students. Johns Hopkins instructed faculty and staff not to intervene in ICE arrests on campus. Vigilante surveillanceThe Trump administration isnt acting alone. Its efforts to eradicate DEI and crack down on pro-Palestine protesters have been aided by a coalition of right-wing groups that share the administrations goals. Several pro-Israel groups have taken credit for ICEs arrests of student activists. The former executive director of Betar, a far-right Zionist organization, claimed he had personally spoken with aides for Sens. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and John Fetterman (D-PA) about Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia student who was arrested in his university-owned housing despite having a green card. Betar claims it has compiled a list of foreign students that have criticized Israel and shared them with the Trump administration. And in late March, Canary Mission, which has tracked pro-Palestine student activists for years, added an Uncovering Foreign Nationals page to its website. The project identifies international students that Canary Mission would like the Trump administration to deport and even claims that immigration law allows for the denaturalization and deportation of naturalized American citizens for serious offenses involving national security and terrorism.A post by Jewish Onliner, a self-proclaimed AI-powered online hub for insights and exposs, was reportedly the catalyst for Yale Law Schools suspension of international law scholar Helyeh Doutaghi. The Jewish Onliner post claimed Doutaghi was a member of a terrorist group. Vigilantes have also sought to expose allegedly discriminatory practices in university admissions. A group of hackers recently leaked the names, test scores, and other identifying information of more than 3 million NYU applicants dating back to 1989. The hackers accused NYU of continuing to engage in racial affirmative action after the Supreme Court outlawed the practice in 2023.Thus far, few universities have pushed back against the Trump administrations assaults on higher education. But there is one notable example. The Rutgers University Senate passed a resolution last week calling for a Mutual Defense Compact in defense of Academic Freedom, Institutional Integrity, and the Research Enterprise. The alliance would include the universities in the Big Ten Academic Alliance, a consortium of 18 institutions including the University of Minnesota, Ohio State University, and the University of California, Los Angeles. Weve all been trying to figure out how to solve this collective action problem, Elizabeth Wrigley-Field, a professor at the University of Minnesota, said in a Bluesky post. This seems like a very positive big step in the right direction.See More:0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 110 Visualizações
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WWW.IGN.COMMario Kart World Isn't the Only Nintendo Switch 2 Game That Costs $80, Some Nintendo Switch 2 Edition Games Do as WellAmid the furore caused by Nintendos decision to charge $79.99 for Switch 2 exclusive Mario Kart World, it has emerged that some of the Switch 2 Edition games announced during the Nintendo Direct also cost $79.99.A Switch 2 Edition of a game goes beyond backwards compatibility. For example, Super Mario Party Jamborees Switch 2 Edition comes with a new suite of content called Jamboree TV that takes advantage of the Joy-Con 2 mouse controls, Switch 2 microphone, and the Switch 2 USB-C camera that will be sold separately. Along with upgraded resolution up to 1440p in TV mode and better frame rate, there are new minigames and online functions as well.Nintendo Switch 2 Game BoxesMetroid Prime 4: Beyonds Switch 2 Edition, meanwhile, supports mouse controls with Joy-Con 2, and multiple display modes such as Quality Mode, which runs at 60fps in 4K when docked, or 1080p at 60fps on handheld; and Performance Mode, which runs a 120fps in 1080p when docked, or 120fps in 720p in handheld mode. All modes support HDR.The Switch 2 Edition of Kirby and the Forgotten Lands Star-Crossed World gets new story content, while The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom gain additional support for the Zelda Notes service in the Nintendo Switch App that provides game help. Some games, like Pokemon Legends: Z-A, only feature performance and resolution bumps as part of the Switch 2 Edition label.Nintendo Switch 2 Edition games will be distinct thanks to the new red-colored physical game case.Now, via pre-order listings at U.S. retailer Walmart, we know how much fans can expect to pay for some of these Nintendo Switch 2 Edition titles.The eye-catching pricing here is that Nintendo is going for the same $80 cost as Mario Kart World, which has already sparked a vociferous debate online. For more context, be sure to check out IGNs article revealing what the experts have to say about Nintendos Switch 2 and Mario Kart World pricing.PlayPerhaps softening the blow somewhat is the upgrade Nintendo will offer to existing owners of these games on Nintendo Switch. However, Nintendo has yet to reveal how much an upgrade pack costs. We do know some upgrade packs, like the upgrade to the Switch 2 Edition of Breath of the Wild and Tears of the Kingdom, will be included in a Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack membership. This is the same membership that gives Switch owners access to online features and the classic library.For more, check out all the news announced during the Nintendo Switch 2 Direct.Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 96 Visualizações
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WWW.IGN.COMHere's Why the Nintendo Switch 2, Mario Kart World, and Everything Around Them Is So ExpensiveDang. $80 for Mario Kart World, huh?Today's Nintendo Direct and subsequent information dump answered many, many burning questions we've been asking about the Nintendo Switch 2, such as launch line-up and release date. Among those was the question of price, not only for the system itself but also for the games and accessories we're going to need alongside it. And it's a good thing that the rest of the Direct was so enjoyable, because Nintendo needed to do some work to justify some of these prices.Nintendo Switch 2 by itself: $449.99 USDNintendo Switch 2 with Mario Kart World bundled in: $499.99Mario Kart World by itself: $79.99Donkey Kong Bananza: $69.99Nintendo Switch 2 Pro Controller: $79.99Nintendo Switch 2 Camera: $49.99Joy-Con 2 Controller pair: $89.99Joy-Con 2 Charging Grip: $34.99Joy-Con 2 Strap: $12.99Joy-Con 2 Wheel pair: $19.99Nintendo Switch 2 Dock Set: $109.99Nintendo Switch 2 Carrying Case and Screen Protector: $34.99Nintendo Switch 2 All-In-One Carrying Case: $79.99Nintendo Switch 2 AC Adapter: $29.99Phew! That's a lot to dish out to play Nintendo games, even assuming most people are just going for the console, a game or two, and maybe a spare controller. Most notable in that list of prices is what's going on with the console itself. $450 isn't far off what a bunch of analysts told me the system was likely to cost when I asked them earlier this year. They predicted $400, but a few said it could likely go higher depending on various economic and technological factors.But even more interesting is Mario Kart Tour. It's $80. That makes it the most expensive we've ever seen a AAA game cost without belonging to some sort of Deluxe Edition, and it's certainly the highest Nintendo's ever gone. You can buy it in a bundle with the system to get $30 taken off the game price, but the $80 price tag has a lot of Nintendo fans concerned at the rapidly rising prices of games and what this may mean for the future. Didn't we just see games start to go from $60 to $70 a few years ago? That hurt bad enough without bumping it up even higher so soon after.So what's happening here? Why are the Nintendo Switch 2 and Mario Kart World priced the way they are? Will we see more game price hikes in the future? As usual, I asked expert analysts to explain it to me. Here's what they said.Why $450?Even though most of the analysts I spoke to today were the same folks who predicted a $400 price point when we chatted in January, no one seemed surprised at the $50 extra on the end of the announcement today. Collectively, the six I spoke to offered various reasons for the higher-than-expected price, largely agreeing on the fairly simple confluence of multiple factors: tariffs, manufacturing costs, and competition.Joost van Dreunen, NYU Stern professor and author of SuperJoost Playlist, calls the $449.99 pricing a "strategic balancing act" on Nintendo's part that reflects a mixture of increased manufacturing costs as well as ongoing uncertainty as to whether or not, and if so, what, tariffs the Trump administration in the United States is going to levy on electronics. "Nintendo appears to be building in a buffer against these potential trade barriers while ensuring they maintain their traditional positive margin on hardware."Piers Harding-Rolls of Ampere Analysis wasn't surprised by the $450 price, and said it made sense given the Switch OLED's $350 price tag. But he also shared an interesting speculation in his response related to van Dreunen's point about tariffs, relating to why Nintendo didn't announce the price in the Nintendo Direct itself today. "My view is that they probably had a range of pricing for the US market in play up until the last minute due to the uncertainty on import tariffs."PlayDr. Serkan Toto, CEO of Kantan Games, threw in another factor: Sony. "Nintendo probably factored in possible tariffs, the current inflationary climate in the world and the US$700 Sony dared to charge for the PlayStation 5 Pro last year."James McWhirter, analyst at Omdia, also mentioned the PS5 Pro as well as the Xbox Series X, both of which he pointed out sold better than their cheaper alternatives (the Xbox Series X surpassed the Series S recently in the U.S.). But he also pointed out an interesting discrepancy in how the Switch 2 is being sold in Japan versus the United States. In Japan, it's releasing a Japanese-language system for 49,980 yen ($333.22), while its multi-language system runs 69,980 yen ($466.56). Why? McWhirter has a fascinating explanation as to the existance of this region-locked system, its pricing, and the discrepancy between it and the pricing of the system in the U.S.:Japan is a key market for Nintendo - our console hardware data reveals that Japan accounts for a quarter (24%) of the Nintendo Switch installed base in 2024, compared with just 2% for Xbox Series X/S and 9% for PlayStation 5.If Switch 2 pricing in Japanese Yen was aligned with the U.S. Dollar price, it would dramatically weaken Nintendo's position in Japan, representing a doubling in the list price over the classic LCD Nintendo Switch model. Yet if Nintendo continued to rely on region-specific pricing that is significantly cheaper in USD terms, they would face an issue with grey imports to other territories.Nintendos answer is to navigate this situation with two models they are offering a substantially cheaper but price competitive 50,000 yen Nintendo Switch 2 model that only includes Japanese language support only.Meanwhile, an international language model at 70,000 yen is being positioned to protect the Japanese market from grey imports from other territories smart considering there are no other major console markets with a not insignificant number of people proficient in the Japanese language.Mario Kart World, at a PremiumOkay, that covers the console itself, so why has Nintendo hiked the price of Mario Kart World into the stratosphere at $80? When I asked the analysts I spoke to, I assumed it was related to tariff concerns. Perhaps Nintendo was worried about potential tariffs but also didn't want to raise the price of the console too high, so a more expensive flagship game was their solution to offset costs?Partially. The experts largely concluded that tariffs may have played a role, with Mat Piscatella, analyst at Circana, suggesting that the higher game pricing was a bit of future-proofing on Nintendo's part. "While pricing for a product can always be lowered over time, it's extremely difficult and painful to raise pricing on a product once it has been announced or released. This is purely my own speculation, but this pricing is most easily explained by trying to be conservative given the current chaotic market conditions."But the experts also told me there was more to it than that. McWhirter told me that this was Nintendo taking advantage of a critical moment of change in the games industry to test the waters on what the market will tolerate as far as game pricing goes. And it's using its most successful game series ever on that trial run, because Nintendo knows if any game can succeed at that price, it's Mario Kart. If it doesn't work out, it can always drop the price, either directly or indirectly through methods like Nintendo Switch Online subscriptions.Nintendo Direct: Nintendo Switch 2 Console SlideshowVan Dreunen said something similar, adding, "The timing aligns with the broader industry's gradual price increases for premium content, as we've seen with other publishers moving to $70 base games. Nintendo may be leapfrogging this intermediate step, calculating that the massive built-in audience for Mario Kart will tolerate a higher price point for what appears to be a significantly expanded experience compared to previous entries."McWhirter also pointed out that not only could this higher cost for Mario Kart World be mitigating things like tariffs or manufacturing costs, it also could be helping balance out other, invisible costs. There's those pesky manfacturing costs, for one, with McWhirter noting that the 3D NAND flash memory from supplier Macronix experts suspect Nintendo is using in Switch 2 game cards is pricey. But there's also the cost of migrating so many first-party titles to Nintendo Switch 2, and the slow build the console will see in its first three years when its blockbuster exclusives are reaching a much smaller audience than was available on the Nintendo Switch.Other experts brought up other factors. Harding-Rolls made a compelling point about Nintendo otherwise not aggressively pursuing in-game monetization, and needing to account for inflation somehow. And he added: "Nintendo has a bit of a history of pricing games higher than other platforms when coming to the market later than other platforms - in this case PS5 and Xbox Series. I remember back in the day N64 titles being more than PS1 titles for example. Some of that is related to cost of goods, but Nintendo also likes to follow its own approach and price based on its own appreciation of value."Rhys Elliott, games analyst at Alinea Analytics, said that the discrepancy in physical and digital pricing is a clear move from Nintendo to push consumers toward digital games, especially when paired with the Virtual Game Card announced last week.Nintendo is charging this price because they feel they can and that people will pay."PlayStation and Xbox have already pushed their platforms to become digital-first, driven by strategies like multi-game subscriptions, digital-only consoles, free-to-plays rise, and platform holders pushing consumers to digital versions via perks (like extra cosmetics and the ability to pre-load a game so its instantly ready to play at launch)," he said."So PlayStation and especially Xbox are very digital-first. But Nintendo is different, more 50-50. In the last nine months of 2024, 51% of Switch software sales were digital. The number was even lower in the holiday period (43.4% digital for calendar Q4), as always. For consumers, a unique value proposition of physical games is the preowned and rental markets. But Nintendos reliance on physical impacts its bottom line, hence the nudging. Nintendo does not gain revenues from physical renting and resales. After all, a copy of Mario Kart 8 Deluxe could be sold on the reseller market 100 times or rented 100 times, but Nintendo would only capture revenues from that first sale. A digital-only market means more revenue and price control for Nintendo."Finally, I asked this question of Toto, who referred to the jump from $60 games to an $80 Mario Kart World as "quite bold." His explanation was short and sweet:"Tariffs could play a role, but I think it is much simpler: Nintendo is charging this price because they feel they can and that people will pay."Who's Buying?Everyone I spoke to agreed that even though the Nintendo Switch 2 and Mario Kart World pricing is a bit of a shock, it's not going to affect sales of the console. At least... not at first."Based on what we're seeing across the market, sales to higher-income or more affluent households likely won't be impacted by this pricing," Piscatella told me. "And, of course, we have the price insensitive super enthusiasts that will do and pay whatever it takes to acquire the Switch 2 at launch. Therefore, because of the limited quantities that will be available during the launch year, I do not anticipate this pricing to hinder year one sales volumes."The true test will come in year two, as supply is likely to become more readily available, and the addressable market will be forced to widen. So, we'll have to see what happens over the next 9-12 months."McWhirter's response was similar, saying that Omdia's current forecast has the Nintendo Switch 2 being outpaced in sales by the original Switch by 6 million units by the end of 2028.Image source: Omdia"Even without considering potential tariff-related instability on hardware pricing, Omdias console forecast indicates that the list price of console hardware is no longer declining at the same rate it once did, even after adjusting for inflation (see figure, above)," he said."After four calendar years on the market, the list price of a PlayStation 5 had only fallen by 12%, compared with 21% for PlayStation 4. This could present a challenge for Nintendo if it hopes to hit a competitive $199.99 entry price point with a Lite-style revision at the same point of its cycle (2027)."Van Dreunen largely agreed as well, adding that the rising prices of other consumer electronics will likely serve to make this transition less jarring for consumers than it would be otherwise. "With the PlayStation 5 Pro at $700 and premium gaming handhelds in the $549+ range, Nintendo's pricing looks relatively reasonable by comparison," he said. Van Dreunen projected 12 - 15 million Nintendo Switch 2 units sold within the first 12 months on the market, citing backward compatibility as a significant factor that would drive adoption.With the PlayStation 5 Pro at $700... Nintendo's pricing looks relatively reasonable by comparison.Toto had a slightly different take. While he feels the hardware price will be acceptable for most consumers, games rising to $70 or $80 is a "much, much harder sell." Especially for a chunk of Nintendo's target audience."In the first year, these prices will not matter that much because there is an audience of people buying everything Nintendo offers, no matter what," he said. "What I am a bit worried about is if Nintendo will again be able to reach the mainstream audience at scale later, i.e. families that might have much tighter budgets for entertainment in today's economy. Nintendo is clearly betting on people accepting higher prices as a new normal by then."Toto's point is likely the one that will resonate the most, at least at the moment. Despite the highs of today's Nintendo Direct, one of the primary audience responses we've seen coming out of it has been concerns about how expensive it all is. Tariffs, manufacturing costs, market shifts, economics, whatever you want to call it, none of the explanations make the increasing costs of games and systems feel better on the wallet.Let's just hope no other publishers get any bright ideas about $100 games next.Rebekah Valentine is a senior reporter for IGN. You can find her posting on BlueSky @duckvalentine.bsky.social. Got a story tip? Send it to rvalentine@ign.com.0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 100 Visualizações
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9TO5MAC.COMOLED iPad mini display prototypes sent to Apple, says leakerPrototypes of an OLED iPad mini display are currently being evaluated by Apple, according to a leaker with a decent track record.It seems pretty clear by this point that the next model will have an OLED screen, and it will definitely be worth waiting for if you currently have an older model Apple is gradually rolling out OLED screens across all its devices. That process began with the Apple Watch, moved onto the iPhone, and continued with the iPad Pro. Future MacBooks are also in line to get OLED screens.The iPad Air and iPad mini will be no exception, with previous reports suggesting that the new models will enter production late this year, but not go on sale until 2026. An OLED MacBook Pro is expected to launch the same year.While Apple uses advanced tandem OLED panels for the iPad Pro models, the iPad Air and iPad mini are expected to get cheaper conventional ones.Display prototypes being evaluatedIn a brief Weibo post, leaker Digital Chat Station says that Apple is currently evaluating a Samsung-made display for the iPad mini. As usual, the machine translation is awkward, but the meaning is clear.This years mainstream brands have 3 small tablets of about 8.8 inches, two LCDs, one OLED, and three flagship chips with different platforms. In addition, iPad is also evaluating small-sized OLEDs.Asked whether the display supports ProMotion, aka 120Hz refresh rates, they say they dont yet know.Worth waiting forAnyone currently looking to upgrade from an older iPad mini would be well advised to wait. The most recent refresh, in October of last year, was a relatively minor one.We noted at the time better Apple Pencil support, connectivity upgrades, support for Apple Intelligence, and a doubling of the base storage to 128GB but said it was mostly unchanged from its predecessor.The form factor is the same, bar a new (very muted) color, so its not smaller or lighter, nor does it have any design enhancements. Battery life is unchanged. The camera is the same, other than a tiny upgrade from Smart HDR 3 to 4. Its also still on the short edge, though this is perhaps more understandable on a device which is most typically used in portrait orientation. The display is completely unchanged: its the exact same 8.3-inch 2266 x 1488 pixel panel, with the same maximum brightness of 500 nits.The next model will be a much better buy. Highlighted accessoriesAdd 9to5Mac to your Google News feed. FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.Youre reading 9to5Mac experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Dont know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel0 Comentários 0 Compartilhamentos 110 Visualizações