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Inside the Nintendo Switch 2 Joy-Cons

In this Article:

  • CT scans of the Nintendo Switch 2 Joy-Con show a compact, well-integrated internal layout with a magnetic latch mechanism, but the thumbstick uses the same potentiometer-based sensing as the original Joy-Con, preserving the same drift failure mode.
  • Potentiometers detect position through physical contact between metal and a resistive surface; that surface wears over time, producing false signals. Hall effect and TMR sensors avoid this through magnetic field detection, but Nintendo's magnetic attachment system created a technical conflict with Hall-based sensing.
  • Nintendo has already extended its Joy-Con repair program to cover Switch 2, an acknowledgment that drift risk remains, and third-party controllers from 8BitDo and GuliKit already ship with Hall effect sensors that eliminate the problem.
6.12.2025

Nintendo has never competed on raw specs. Its consoles earn their following by rethinking how people play: the NES with its toy-like accessibility, the Wii with motion controls that pulled non-gamers off the couch, the original Switch with a form factor that collapsed the distinction between home and handheld gaming. The Switch 2 builds on that legacy with meaningfully better hardware: a new Nvidia chip, LPDDR5X memory, 256 GB of UFS 3.1 storage, an 8-inch 120 Hz HDR display. It is faster and sharper in every measurable way.

We took a non-destructive look inside one of its most consequential components: the redesigned Joy-Con controller.

Drift diagnosed

Nintendo describes the Switch 2 Joy-Cons as “redesigned from the ground up.” That is structurally true. The rail-and-clip attachment system is gone, replaced by magnetic latching. There is mouse-style input, integrated voice and video chat, an updated look. But under the thumbstick, the fundamental design decision is unchanged.

Stick drift is the defining complaint of the original Joy-Con. The character moves when you are not touching the controls. That is not a software glitch. It comes from physical degradation of the hardware: a potentiometer, where metal contacts slide across a resistive surface. The surface wears down over time, or accumulates dust, and begins producing false signals. The new Joy-Con uses the same sensing principle. Nintendo has already extended its Joy-Con repair program to cover Switch 2, which says something about their confidence in the fix.

Our CT scan shows the internal layout clearly: the magnetic latch mechanism, the compact component arrangement, and the stick module at the center of it. The engineering is elegant in many respects. The potentiometer is still there.

Many Nintendo loyalists have been disappointed to discover the same dated potentiometer technology used for the Switch 2 Joy-Con rather than magnetic-based alternatives like Hall Effect sensors that would mitigate stick drift.
Many Nintendo loyalists have been disappointed to discover the same dated potentiometer technology used for the Switch 2 Joy-Con rather than magnetic-based alternatives like Hall Effect sensors that would mitigate stick drift.
Open the Switch 2 Joystick Scan

Potentiometers vs. Hall effect

Potentiometers dominate consumer controllers because they are inexpensive and straightforward to integrate. The failure mode is real but predictable, and the cost is low enough that replacement rather than prevention has been the industry's default response.

The alternatives are better on durability but harder to implement. Hall effect sensors detect position through magnetic fields rather than physical contact, which means no wear and no drift. Third-party controllers from 8BitDo and GuliKit already use this approach, and the performance difference is measurable. TMR sensors, which use tunneling magnetoresistance, offer even greater sensitivity and stronger resistance to interference.

The Switch 2 has a specific problem with Hall sensors: the Joy-Cons attach magnetically, and those mounting magnets would interfere with Hall-based position sensing. TMR could have worked around that constraint. But it would have required new suppliers, firmware changes, and a longer development cycle. Nintendo weighed those costs against the timeline and chose the known quantity.

Open the Hall Effect Joystick scan

What CT makes clear

CT imaging does not render a verdict on that tradeoff. What it does is make the tradeoff visible. The Joy-Con is a well-integrated piece of hardware with a known failure mode at its center, and the scan shows both things simultaneously. Every hardware team works inside real constraints: timelines, supply chains, cost targets, technical dependencies. The Switch 2 Joy-Con reflects all of those. The drift risk reflects them too.

Citations
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