Nintendo rep says previous Wii and Wii U peripherals are not compatible with the #SWITCH
— GBAtemp (@GBAtemp) January 13, 2017
If you can still get a good price for them (you probably can't), and you don't plan on using them with your wii/wiiu again - then go for it, sell them.so should i sell my wii remotes
It being "outdated" isn't the problem. And theirs no problem not making it compatible. By that logic the GameCube should have never been compatible with the Wii and Wii U. Nintendo just wants to make more money.Why would they use a 10 years old outdated technology where they can have new remotes with new features? As they said, the Switch is a NEW console, that is totally different. You know why the Wii U failed? Because it was too similar to the Wii.
You're half right. It's not just that Nintendo wants to make more money, it's also a branding effort--they're making a clean break from the Wii brand, and having compatibility with Wii remotes would work against that.It being "outdated" isn't the problem. And theirs no problem not making it compatible. By that logic the GameCube should have never been compatible with the Wii and Wii U. Nintendo just wants to make more money.
wiimotes don't use the sensor bar for motion control, it just emits an ir signal for pointing purposes (you can actually replace it with two candles ).The JoyCons seem to use a very different method of motion control.
They don't use the old sensor bar method.
And as far as I know, there is no place to even plug a sensor bar into the dock.
Would like to think the Wii U Pro controller would be supported. It would appear that the JoyCons, and Switch Pro controller don't have analog triggers, so what the Wii U Pro controller would be missing compared to the Switch Pro by comparison is NFC tech, Share button, and gyro.Wiimotes, probably not. Wii U pro controllers, maybe?