The thing that worries me here is the ones that are marked okay have passed “basic compatibility testing”. What are the chances that when someone actually plays through them, something will be broken? Maybe slim, I don’t know, but would there be a patch for those cases?
Nintendo is not going to do extensive QA testing for every single Switch game (especially not every third party shovelware game which might have had errors running on a regular Switch). I assume they ran every automated test they had handy and had someone spend X hours poking around the game to try to find issues.
The more interesting question would be how will games be fixed? Are they patching the game to fix the issue or are they patching the Switch 2 firmware to match Switch behavior? The more bugs they fix with the later approach the less important it is to exhaustively test every single game.
The thing that worries me here is the ones that are marked okay have passed “basic compatibility testing”. What are the chances that when someone actually plays through them, something will be broken? Maybe slim, I don’t know, but would there be a patch for those cases?
Nintendo is not going to do extensive QA testing for every single Switch game (especially not every third party shovelware game which might have had errors running on a regular Switch). I assume they ran every automated test they had handy and had someone spend X hours poking around the game to try to find issues.
The more interesting question would be how will games be fixed? Are they patching the game to fix the issue or are they patching the Switch 2 firmware to match Switch behavior? The more bugs they fix with the later approach the less important it is to exhaustively test every single game.
I expect they’ll patch both. Start with patches to the Switch and then, if the game can be patched, patch that.
Depend on the publishers and developers. If they are still active, chances are they may update any major issue.
Considering this is Nintendo, the patch would probably cost $20.