Nintendo Switch

Nintendo Now Offers Free Repairs for Switch Drift Joy-Cons in Europe and the UK



Nintendo Now Offers Free Repairs for Switch Drift Joy-Cons in Europe and the UK

by iuriawg

32 Comments

  1. Adamaneve

    Is this the first time they’ve formally acknowledged Joy-Con drift? They do the repairs in NA as well, but I don’t think they directly mention the issue like this.

  2. ThisOneTimeAtLolCamp

    As somebody who had one repaired and still have the Nintendo box it came back in, it already was free in the UK.

  3. I didn’t realise Brexit meant we left the continent too.

  4. a_guy_called_m

    Oh sweet! Do they still charge for postage or anything else or is it like 100% free?

  5. leviathab13186

    Aka, they send you a refurbished pair. Still better than nothing, but if you’re sentimental, it’s better to repair yourself just in case.

  6. It’s relatively easy to fix yourself, but this is great for anyone not willing or comfortable to crack open their own joycons. That said, do yourself a favour and get the Gulikit hall effect sticks and you won’t have to worry about that problem anymore

  7. You need to provide a receipt rigth? I got a second hand switch that started drifting recently but no receipt

  8. hollowknight696

    About time. I’m in Belgium.
    First pair was under warranty and was repaired free of charge.
    Second pair was no longer under warranty and Nintendo wanted to charge me 50€ for the repair. I did not proceed with it.
    But now I will !

  9. BigV_Invest

    Me who has severe procrastination issues: Neat, just in time to fix my launch day switch

  10. itsastart_to

    If anyone has done it, was it a hard process and how long did it take?

  11. haydar1994

    Since owning my switch (about 5 years now) I have sent nintendo my joycons a total of 6 times to repair for drift.

    Everytime they fixed it for free with no requirement of a reicpt or proof of purchase.

    They did however complete the job at wildly different time scales. I once got my normal joycons back in 3 days and one time around 3 weeks.

  12. Capiguava

    Best solution: Gulikit Hall sensor Joy-Con NS40 replacement joysticks

  13. Insane96MCP

    They took 22€ a few months back, and just after 1 month the joycons started drift again. My collegue ordered the repair kit and repaired them for free and they still don’t drifr

  14. Virt_McPolygon

    It’s always been free. I’ve returned 4 or 5 times and they’ve always fixed and returned for free in a couple of days. One time I got a free Amiibo in the box when it came back.

  15. razorwiregoatlick877

    If you own a switch lite you are screwed apparently.

  16. eXePyrowolf

    That’s nice. But as far as I know, this doesn’t extend to the pro controller, and that’s the only one I bought that got any drift after all this time.

  17. Banapple247

    Perfect, right at the end of the console’s lifecycle

  18. LordanTroi

    When sending them for repairs, do I include the switch serial number or the joy-cons serial number?

  19. Bruce_Ring-sting

    Ooooh good for you! Goood for YOU!

  20. detectivemario

    How about in all places where you fucking sell the Switch, Nintendo?

    (BTW European Economic Area, not Europe, so I’m out of luck)

  21. MasterDimentio90

    The Switch came out on March 3, 2017. How is this STILL a thing? Does Nintendo have even the slightest clue about what Joycon Drift is, or how to fix it?

    Honestly, they probably messed up the Joycons on purpose to make consumers have to buy new ones till said consumer gets a working pair without Joycon drift. Given a pair of Joycon’s cost $80 (Not sure about in other countries), Nintendo will be making bank off of a move like that. Nintendo also knows the consumers will just deal with it, because it’s Nintendo.

    Kind of how like Nintendo knows as much as people are complaining about The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom being $80, we’re still gonna buy it anyways because it’s Zelda.

    It wouldn’t be the first time Nintendo has pulled business practices like the above. Back when Amiibos were the hot new thing, Nintendo would purposely send a small amount of the newest Amiibo to give the consumer a scare of a fake scarcity. That way, when it finally does go on sale again, said consumer will buy it immediately out of fear of missing their chance again. They also pulled that stuff with the Nintendo Switch upon release.

  22. kerelenko

    Only in countries with strong consumer protection laws

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