This New Switch Controller Revives Nintendo’s Best Controller Ever

NYXI, a gaming peripheral controller maker, recently announced a new third-party controller for the Nintendo Switch. The design is not only reminsicent of the WaveBird — aka the best Nintendo controller ever — but the company claims that this controller will never get Joy-Con drift.

The NYXI Wizard Wireless Joy-Pad is a wireless controller that features an array of customization, including two remappable back buttons, in addition to interchangeable joystick rings. You could, for example, use a round joystick to play racing games or put an octagonal joystick circle on the controller when you are about to play a fighting game. NYXI claims the battery life is roughly 6.5 hours on a single full charge.

One of the biggest selling points for the Wizard controller is the claim that it will not suffer from Joy-Con drift. NYXI claims it can achieve this because the Wizard uses a Hall Effect joystick. For quick context, Hall Effect joysticks use a magnetic system meaning that the joystick never physically touches the sensor itself. With Joy-Con drift one of the biggest ongoing issues with the Nintendo Switch, this controller certainly appeals to those looking for a solution to this issue.

The NYXI Wizard is available right now on NYXI’s website and costs $69.

Taylor is the Associate Tech Editor at IGN. You can follow her on Twitter @TayNixster.

Dead Space: Here’s What Comes in Each Edition

A top-to-bottom remake of Dead Space is set to release for PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC on January 27, 2023. Like its predecessor, it finds the engineer Isaac Clarke among the last survivors of a deep space catastrophe on the mining ship USG Ishimura. The game is available to preorder now in several editions and from a variety of retailers (see it at Amazon, or Amazon UK). Read on to find out what comes in each edition, how much it costs, and more.

Preorder Dead Space

Physical Version

PS5

Xbox Series X

PC

The standard edition just comes with the game itself, but that’s all you really need.

Dead Space Digital Deluxe Edition

The digital-only deluxe edition includes the game itself, plus five exclusive cosmetics. These include three unique suits and two suit textures.

Dead Space Collector’s Edition

The collector’s edition is exclusive to the Limited Run Games Store. It comes with the following:

  • Physical Copy of Dead Space (not included in PC version)
  • Dead Space Collector’s Box
  • Isaac Helmet (full-size and wearable, with working lights)
  • Dead Space CD Soundtrack
  • Lithograph Print
  • Foil Stamped Lithograph Folio
  • Four Mini Posters
  • Ishimura Patch
  • Marker Enamel Pin
  • Metal 4″ Marker Statue
  • Dead Space SteelBook

Dead Space Preorder Bonus

Preorder Dead Space on Steam, and you’ll receive a free copy of Dead Space 2 on January 27, when the new game launches.

What Is the Dead Space Remake?

The new 2023 version of Dead Space is a from-the-ground-up remake of the 2008 original. It kicks off when engineer Isaac Clarke is dispatched on a repair mission aboard the USG Ishimura, where something has gone horribly wrong. He must fight through hordes of monstrous creatures called Necromorphs, mainly using his engineering tools.

The original was one of the best survival horror games ever made, in my opinion, and this new version features an expanded story line, plus modernized graphics, audio, and gameplay. You can check out our Dead Space hands-on preview for more of the exciting deets, like the “Peeling System” and the “Intensity Director.”

Other Preorder Guides

Chris Reed is a deals expert and commerce editor for IGN. You can follow him on Twitter @_chrislreed.

Combining Trauma with Feelgood — The Story of Wavetale

“Happy lyrics should always be paired with a minor key, and vice versa!” – a guest teacher at my music school once proclaimed this with certainty, arguing that you needed that touch of melancholy to make things interesting.

Now, writing a video game script might not be the same as writing a hit song, but those words still come back to me from time to time, and definitely popped up while I was working on Wavetale. Because while it might not be a universal truth, combining the lighthearted and the heavy can create something special. More importantly, it helps us create something relatable.

I remember when my close friend’s dad died. It was sudden and unexpected, and he had to wait until the next day to take the train up north to the rest of his family. I kept him company for the night and we spent the evening altering between crying and remembering his dad, and laughing at overly intense knife infomercials on TV. Humans have always used humor to cope, and it felt natural for us to go down that route with Wavetale, too.

character shot

At its core, Wavetale deals with some weighty topics: the loss of a daughter and mother, a grandma who buries her grief with work, and a sunken city dealing with the aftermath of war. And amidst all this is Sigrid, a lonely teenage girl who has never known any other life than this—until an old enemy returns and changes everything. But rather than keeping a tight grip on the dark aspects of Sigrid’s experience, we often chose to put them on the sidelines in favor of Grandma making a pun about bananas or Sigrid remembering the time she kept an eel for a pet. Their fears and sorrows always exist in the periphery, but only rarely does it take over entirely.

There were different reasons to go down this path, one of them being gameplay. Wavetale is about movement. A lot of the dialogue in the game takes place as you surf the waves of Strandville, and a complicated conversation about your part in a war of the past just doesn’t come into its own when the player is happily flinging themselves into the air or making a daring dive below the water’s surface. We needed to find ways to convey these feelings and stories without them clashing with the player’s actions.

screenshot

But even outside the more technical reasons, I also find this method to be a helpful tool for making heavy topics approachable. We really wanted to tell a story that felt hopeful. Wavetale was created mostly during a raging pandemic, and maybe our own need for warmth and optimism influenced the work we did. A crisis can drive people apart, but also bring us together in unexpected ways, just like when Sigrid realizes that… well, I leave it to you to play the game and see how things pan out.

Xbox Live

Wavetale

Thunderful


6

$29.99

Explore the open sea and the decaying archipelago of Strandville in Wavetale, a story-driven action-adventure game introducing you to fed-up fishermen, secretive hermits—and maybe a pirate or two. Traverse calm waters and surging waves as Sigrid, a young girl who befriends a mysterious shadow that provides her with the power to walk on water.

Speed through the waves, swing yourself from housetops with your net, and defeat monstrous enemies to save the citizens of the islands. All with a little help from the shadows down below—and your cranky grandmother.

Related:
New Class, More Content, All Black Desert
Designing We Are The Caretakers, Available Now on Xbox
Shieldmaiden Is Available Now for Xbox One and Xbox Series X|S

Intriguing pixel Metroidvania Animal Well has found a publisher

Animal Well has been picked up by Bigmode, the indie publishing company set up last year by YouTuber Videogamedunkey. The Metroidvania is being developed by Shared Memories, another name for solo dev Billy Basso. Basso is crafting a multi-layered puzzle horror platformer that he hopes will keep people playing the game for years, and collaborating to solve its mysteries. You can see a bit more of what to expect from Animal Well in the preview video below.

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