Nintendo must pay a €35 million ($46 million) penalty in France, after being sanctioned by the country's consumer rights office over the issue of Joy-Con drift. France's General Directorate for ...
Owners of the original Switch all fear one thing: stick drift. Nintendo's detachable controllers became infamous during the last generation for their tendency to break. It was a big enough deal that ...
Polygon Nintendo Direct Game reveals, trailers, and what’s next from the house that Mario built. Get more news→ Whenever Nintendo releases a major first-party game, it often sells themed accessories ...
The Light Purple and Light Green Joy-Con are set to launch alongside Mario Tennis Fever on February 12, 2026 — though these pastel colored Joy-Con don't appear to necessarily be themed around Mario's ...
Nintendo of Europe has agreed to pay a €35 million fine after a French regulator found the company misled customers about Joy-Con drift defects on original Switch controllers. As reported by Le Monde, ...
The Joy-Con stick drift saga never ends. France's equivalent of the Federal Trade Commission, Direction Générale de la Concurrence, de la Consommation et de la Répression des Fraudes or DGCCRF for ...
France's General Directorate for Competition, Consumer Affairs and Fraud Control (DGCCRF) announced on Monday, June 8, that it had imposed a €35 million fine on Nintendo of Europe, the European branch ...
Marc Deschamps has been writing about video games and popular culture for more than a decade, at various outlets. Prior to joining GameRant, Marc served as a freelancer, staff writer, and editor at ...
Nintendo had more info to share on Splatoon Raiders in today's Direct, but it looks like there is even more in the pipeline. After giving us a closer look at some gameplay (which still looks very ...
Nintendo of Europe has agreed to a €35 million settlement following a French investigation into controller defects Regulators accused the brand of deceptive commercial practices by withholding defect ...
Nintendo has been fined a whopping €35 million (just over $40 million) thanks to the widespread drifting defects that plagued the original Switch. It's been deemed that Nintendo effectively misled its ...