Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
GamesRadar
GamesRadar
Technology
Austin Wood

Switch 2 stick drift doomers pin their hopes on Nintendo's repair service, which will take a Joy-Con 2 that "doesn't work" for free

Hand holding right Nintendo Switch 2 Joy-Con controller with thumb extended to reach the thumbstick.

Nintendo says the Switch 2 Joy-Cons were rebuilt from the ground up, but early hardware breakdowns suggest they're quite similar to the originals under the hood, and comparably prone to the analog stick drift that plagued the original console.

Fearing a repeat, some fans have preemptively latched onto Nintendo's repair service. I've seen some people preach about the 'free drift repair' Nintendo's offering, which isn't totally accurate, but there is indeed a free repair option for busted controllers.

It is likely no coincidence that busted Joy-Con 2 controllers have their own service request form in Nintendo's online customer support desk. (I could only view the US / Canada version for this testing, but users in other regions have reported similar findings.) If you select "controller" as your affected product under physical damage, and then specify Joy-Con 2, you're prompted to begin a Joy-Con 2 request.

You can select from a variety of "symptoms" for repair on this page, but you'll notice a distinct lack of drift on the list, which includes:

  • Unable to attach or detach Joy-Con 2 / Joy-Con from the console
  • Joy-Con 2 / Joy-Con Stick feels loose
  • Joy-Con 2 / Joy-Con R or L stick doesn't work
  • Physical damage to Joy-Con 2 / Joy-Con
  • Joy-Con 2 / Joy-Con buttons don't work
  • Joy-Con 2 Mouse sensor isn't functioning

Frankly, if you were suffering from good old-fashioned stick drift – and so soon after launch, drift would have to come from a manufacturing defect rather than wear and tear from use – I don't know what you'd want to select here. "Doesn't work" feels pretty apt, but "loose" and "physical damage" aren't off-base either.

Anyway, I did go through the service process – without actually submitting an empty claim, lest the Nintendo Ninjas appear at my doorstep – to confirm that, yep, you can send in a faulty Joy-Con 2 free of charge. No price, shipping, or tax, at least at this stage of the request.

This isn't the Hall Effect drift prevention that Switch 2 hopefuls had been looking for, but as a reactive solution it does provide some peace of mind. Just, uh, make do without your Joy-Cons while they're in transit purgatory.

The next big Switch 2 exclusive Donkey Kong Bananza is playable on Switch 1 after all, you just need a friend kind enough to share it to your dusty old relic of a console.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.