Could be DIY very easily, actually it could be made to resemble a GC somewhat.Now we need a dock with gamecube ports built into it!
Hmmm... I should get a 3D printer.
Could be DIY very easily, actually it could be made to resemble a GC somewhat.Now we need a dock with gamecube ports built into it!
With this, the potential is limitless.Seems like this can be used for more than just GC controllers. Currently using my old SNES controller on Switch. I have an adapter from raphnet that changes the SNES plug into a GC one. That daisy-chains into the official GC adapter and voila, gets recognised by the system. There doesn't seem to be any input lag.
Basically, as long as there's an adapter that gives the controller of your choice a Gamecube plug, you should be able to use it now. An N64 controller for example should be useable on Switch with this method.
Would love to see how this would look. Hell, I've got a billion gamecubes in storage. Might rip apart one of the dead ones for it's shell.Could be DIY very easily, actually it could be made to resemble a GC somewhat.
Hmmm... I should get a 3D printer.
Seems like this can be used for more than just GC controllers. Currently using my old SNES controller on Switch. I have an adapter from raphnet that changes the SNES plug into a GC one. That daisy-chains into the official GC adapter and voila, gets recognised by the system. There doesn't seem to be any input lag.
Basically, as long as there's an adapter that gives the controller of your choice a Gamecube plug, you should be able to use it now. An N64 controller for example should be useable on Switch with this method.
Seems like this can be used for more than just GC controllers. Currently using my old SNES controller on Switch. I have an adapter from raphnet that changes the SNES plug into a GC one. That daisy-chains into the official GC adapter and voila, gets recognised by the system. There doesn't seem to be any input lag.
Basically, as long as there's an adapter that gives the controller of your choice a Gamecube plug, you should be able to use it now. An N64 controller for example should be useable on Switch with this method.
Yes, because that's not how controllers work. Stupid question was stupid.Am I the only one that hopes that we can hack the Switch this way ?
Excuse me?Am I the only one that hopes that we can hack the Switch this way ?
Yes, because that's not how controllers work. Stupid question was stupid.
The question was hopes, and there have been controller accessed debug menus before (hit every direction at once, not doable on a normal controller, trivial for a debug device and also a dance mat for that matter). Probably not on this system though.Yes, because that's not how controllers work. Stupid question was stupid.
Now we need a dock with gamecube ports built into it!
Just put in the Konami Code and you'll instantly have system-level accessAm I the only one that hopes that we can hack the Switch this way ?
Kernel-level*Just put in the Konami Code and you'll instantly have system-level access
Kernal*, only the l33t h4xx0rs know it's kernal and not kernelKernel-level*
Yeah, ok... Kerbal hack program, whatever.Kernal*, only the l33t h4xx0rs know it's kernal and not kernel