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February 21, 2023
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Nintendo Switch Review

Nintendo Switch Review

I’ve been PCMag’s home entertainment expert for over 10 years, covering both TVs and everything you might want to connect to them. I’ve reviewed more than a thousand different consumer electronics products including headphones, speakers, TVs, and every major game system and VR headset of the last decade. I’m an ISF-certified TV calibrator and a THX-certified home theater professional, and I’m here to help you understand 4K, HDR, Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, and even 8K (and to reassure you that you don’t need to worry about 8K at all for at least a few more years).

Nintendo Switch

The Bottom Line

The Nintendo Switch works as both a home game console and a handheld, offering access to a remarkably strong library of excellent games on your TV at home or in your hands on the go.

PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

Nintendo took a bold step with its latest game system. The $299 Switch is a fully functional home game console like the Wii U, but it can also be used as a handheld system like the 3DS. Between its 6-inch tablet body and its detachable, wireless Joy-Con controllers, Nintendo is exploring some very interesting concepts with this device. Instead of directly facing off against the PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, or Xbox Series X, the Switch represents a whole new path in gaming.

Nearly two years after it first came out, the Switch has a strong collection of excellent first-party titles, ports of great games from the past, and a remarkably wide selection of fantastic indies, most of which offer the choice of playing on a TV at home or in your hands anywhere else. And innovative titles like the Labo series show there is seemingly no limit to Nintendo’s creativity and the system’s versatility. Its online service can use some work, but we still have no qualms giving the Switch our Editors’ Choice recommendation. If the game selection appeals to you and you want to play handheld, but don’t need the TV connectivity, the Switch Lite is an excellent, portable-only version of the system.

The Tablet

The Nintendo Switch includes the tablet-like system, left and right Joy-Con controllers, the Joy-Con grip to hold the controllers like a conventional gamepad, two Joy-Con wrist straps, the Switch Dock, a USB-C wall adapter, and an HDMI cable. No games are bundled with it, though Nintendo periodically offers Switch bundles that include games and accessories, at higher prices than the standard Switch.

The Switch itself looks like a plain, slightly chunky black plastic tablet. It measures 4.0 by 6.8 by 0.5 inches (HWD) and weighs 10.6 ounces. The thickness and weight work to the Switch’s advantage, since it makes the tablet feel solid both on its own and with the Joy-Con controllers attached.

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Metal rails on the left and right securely hold the Joy-Cons in place, and their edges are rounded enough that you can comfortably hold just the Switch without any connection points poking your hand. The system is only available in black, but you can choose between two bundles: one with two dark gray Joy-Con controllers, and one with a blue Joy-Con and an orange Joy-Con.

Atop the Switch is a small power button and a volume rocker toward the left, and a 3.5mm headphone jack and game card slot to the right. Switch games look like slightly thicker SD cards, or slightly longer 3DS cards. A fan grille sits between the volume rocker and the headphone jack, keeping the system ventilated without making any noticeable noise. The bottom of the Switch has a USB-C port for charging and connecting to the Switch Dock.

On the back panel, there’s a pair of speakers that get surprisingly loud, along with a small plastic kickstand that flips out of the left side. The kickstand lets you stand the Switch up on a table, and reveals the microSD card slot behind it. Unfortunately, the kickstand feels flimsy, and is both thin and positioned near the edge of the system, so it doesn’t stand up with much stability; the Nyko Kick Stand is a $5 replacement made of metal that feels much sturdier, even if it doesn’t quite fix that balance issues of the stand being located so far off to the side. You get 32GB of internal storage, with support for microSD cards up to 2TB.

A firmware update in 2021 finally added support for Bluetooth audio, so you can use Bluetooth headphones with the system. This is a welcome addition, because it adds a headphone option to the system in docked mode.

Display and Dock

The Switch is equipped with a 6-inch, 720p capacitive touch screen, the most advanced ever put on a Nintendo device. The 3DS’ screen only shows a 400-by-240 picture (per eye, for the handheld’s 3D effect), which means the Switch’s 1,280-by-720 screen has nine times as many pixels. It’s a bright, sharp screen, with excellent colors even when viewing it off-angle. It isn’t as crisp or as high-res as the 1080p and Quad HD screens of many modern smartphones and tablets, but for a Nintendo gaming device, it’s very impressive.

You can charge the Switch by plugging the included USB-C wall adapter directly into the tablet, but you’ll more likely plug the adapter into the included Switch Dock and drop the Switch into the dock when you want to either charge the system or play with it on your TV. The Switch Dock is a block-shaped piece of black plastic measuring 4.0 by 6.8 by 1.9 inches that charges the system, provides an HDMI output so you can connect it to your TV and play games in 1080p on a big screen, and provides three USB 3.0 ports for storage and accessories. The Switch drops into the dock easily, and automatically switches the output to HDMI as soon as it connects.

Joy-Cons

The included Joy-Cons are a pair of wireless controllers that can be used with the Switch in different configurations. Each Joy-Con measures 4.0 by 1.4 by 0.5 inches (not including the analog stick or shoulder trigger protrusions), and looks like half of a conventional gamepad built into a rounded one-handed grip with a large flat side equipped with an attachment rail.

Both Joy-Cons feature half the controls found on a standard gamepad, including an analog stick, four face buttons that double as a digital direction pad, and two shoulder buttons you can easily reach when holding it in one hand, plus left and right shoulder buttons, a pairing button, and four indicator lights hidden on the attachment rail. A mechanical release sits near each Joy-Con’s rail; accessories stay solidly connected once they click into place, and you can only remove them by pressing the release before sliding the Joy-Con upward.

The Joy-Cons aren’t symmetrical, and the left and right versions have a few different controls and features. The left Joy-Con has a minus button for accessing menus near the top, and a capture button that takes screenshots just below the face buttons. The right Joy-Con has a plus button for pausing games and accessing menus near the top, and a home button just below the right analog stick. The right Joy-Con has some more advanced internal sensors as well, including an infrared camera and an NFC chip for reading Amiibos.

Typically the left and right Joy-Cons rest in your left and right hands, letting you access the analog sticks and face buttons easily with your thumbs. You can also turn a Joy-Con sideways with the attachment rail facing away from you and use it as a simpler controller. This enables two-player gaming out of the box without needing to buy more Joy-Cons. The asymmetrical design of the Joy-Cons become apparent in this configuration, because the left features the analog stick on the far left side and the face buttons in the middle, while the right features the face buttons on the far right side and the analog stick in the middle. Whether the Joy-Cons are awkward to use in this position is a matter of hand size and personal taste—I didn’t mind either after a few moments to get used to the different spacing of the controls.

The Switch can help you find wayward JoyCons if you listen closely. The tablet can remotely activate any paired JoyCon within range with a tap of the touch screen, so you can listen for them. They have no speaker or buzzer, but their rumble motors are powerful enough that they can make an audible buzz on their own, which is very useful if you dropped one behind the couch or left it in a drawer.

Grips and Straps

The included Joy-Con wrist straps are simple plastic rails that slide over each Joy-Con, providing a wrist strap to keep it secure and placing larger, easier-to-press mechanical shoulder buttons over the tiny ones on the naked controller.

The Joy-Con grip is a plastic shell you can insert the two Joy-Cons into to use them as a conventional gamepad. With the Joy-Cons attached, it feels like a slightly lighter, smaller version of the standard Xbox controller. The grip has four light tunnels for each attached Joy-Con to indicate their connection status (the status lights on the rails of each Joy-Con shines through the tunnels to the front of the grip).

The grip itself is just a plastic shell, and doesn’t provide power to the Joy-Cons; if you want to charge while playing, you need to get the optional $30 charging grip, which looks very similar to the Joy-Con grip, but has a power pass-through to keep the controllers charged when in use. You can’t charge the Joy-Cons in the included Joy-Con grip, so you need to remove them and attach them to the Switch itself when they run out of power. Third-party accessory makers like Bionik and Nyko also provide alternatives with dedicated Joy-Con chargers and power grips.

Additional Joy-Cons go for $50 each or $80 a pair, and are available in dark gray, neon blue, neon red, and neon yellow versions. Alternatively, you can also pick up a $70 Switch Pro Controller. It’s a traditional one-piece gamepad that feels quite solid, but doesn’t come apart for separate use.

Portable or Home Console?

Switching between Switch configurations is as easy as it looks. The system automatically turns the screen on when you remove it from the Switch Dock, and outputs video over HDMI within seconds of inserting it in the dock. The Joy-Cons wirelessly connect to the system quickly, and pair automatically by directly sliding onto the tablet. While the mechanical latches on the Joy-Cons don’t make the satisfying clicking sound the Switch commercials show, the Switch’s speaker plays that very sound effect whenever you connect a Joy-Con to the tablet’s rails when it’s out of the dock.

As a handheld game system, the Switch feels large but comfortable. It’s thicker than a tablet but much thinner than the Wii U gamepad, and far more natural to hold. It’s 9.4 inches wide with both Joy-Cons attached, making it too cumbersome to easily put in a pocket, but it can fit in most bags without a problem. I bring my Switch with me to work every day on the subway. It fits comfortably in my bag when I’m not playing it, and doesn’t feel overwhelmingly bulky when https://jiji.ng/ I play it while standing.

The first Switches’ batteries could last between 3 and 6.5 hours depending on what you play, which was a fairly weak showing for a gaming handheld. More recently manufactured Switch consoles, with the model number HAC-001(-01), have an upgraded battery that can last 4.5 to 9 hours, a significant improvement. Because the Switch charges with USB-C instead of a proprietary Nintendo connector, you can keep it topped up with an external battery pack and a USB-C cable. The Joy-Cons, meanwhile, are rated to last up to 20 hours per charge.

I really like the Switch’s portable mode. It’s incredibly convenient to pick up the system and go without needing to stop your game. It’s just as satisfying to get home after playing on the subway, dock the Switch, and sit back with it like a home console. I often found myself in the middle of a quest in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild when a favorite show was coming on, so I simply attached the Joy-Cons and played on the couch while half-watching TV. It’s a flexibility we simply haven’t seen in a game system before.

Nintendo hasn’t announced any plans for a virtual reality accessory or system to work with the Switch, like Sony’s PlayStation VR for the PS4/PS5.

Online Service

Nintendo has joined Microsoft and Sony in requiring a paid subscription to play more games online. While you could play games like Mario Kart 8, ARMS, and Puyo Puyo Tetris with other people all over the world for free in the first year and a half that the system was available, you now must subscribe to the Nintendo Switch Online service. The good news is that, at $3.99 per month or $19.99 per year, it’s a third the price of PlayStation Plus or Xbox Live Gold. The bad news is that it doesn’t offer much benefit besides just enabling online multiplayer.

The service also enables cloud saving for your games, which is important because there is still no way to back up your saves to local storage. Cloud saving works with the vast majority of games, but not every game, and even certain first-party games like Splatoon 2 and Animal Crossing: New Horizons won’t use it. That makes it incredibly limiting.

Nintendo Switch Online also enables voice chat on paper, but it’s so unwieldy you might as well use Discord, Skype, or some other app. Instead of enabling voice chat through the Switch itself using a wired headset, it’s done through the Nintendo Switch Online mobile app. It coordinates voice chat through your phone, requiring you to juggle two devices at once if you want to talk to other people in your game. It’s effectively useless next to other VoIP apps.

While Nintendo still hasn’t announced any Virtual Console for the Switch, Nintendo Switch Online lets you play several dozen of NES and Super NES games in their own system library apps on the Switch. The selection isn’t close to the Virtual Console on the 3DS and Wii U, but Nintendo adds a few new games every few months, and some excellent classics are on there.

The Nintendo Switch Games

The Switch is already home to many classic games. It started with Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, and since then we’ve seen fantastic titles like Mario Tennis Aces, Puyo Puyo Tetris, Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle, Splatoon 2, and the superlative Super Mario Odyssey.

The digital eShop currently offers a good handful of compelling independent titles and a surprising number of Neo Geo classics released by the Hamster Corporation as the ACA Neo Geo series. Lots of good older games have also been released separately by Nintendo and other publishers as full Switch ports, including Bayonetta 2, Lumines Remastered, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, Okami HD, and The World Ends With You: Final Remix. Indie games are well-represented, with ports of Inside, Night In The Woods, Stardew Valley, Undertail, and dozens of other acclaimed titles.

Gameplay

I played Breath of the Wild on the Switch both in a handheld configuration and on a 65-inch 4K TV, and the game nicely shows off the system’s power in both cases. While Nintendo has made no claims about the Switch’s graphical capabilities in comparison with the PlayStation 4 or the Xbox One, it’s clearly more powerful than the Wii U. Connected to a TV and outputting at 1080p, the game’s stylized graphics look sharp and eye-catching. They’re just as good on the smaller 720p screen of the Switch itself.

The details and draw distance in Breath of the Wild far outshine those of The Legend of Zelda: Wind Waker HD and The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess HD, and the game features more impressive models and textures. The graphics stutter slightly in large outdoor scenes with lots of individually modeled waving grass, but generally it’s very smooth.

Breath of the Wild is an open-world adventure, incorporating elements of both the Legend of Zelda series and Western open-world games like Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain. Your character, Link, can run around a massive Hyrule and explore dozens of different mini dungeons, gaining new abilities and equipment as he explores. Not only is it fun to play, it’s easily the best-looking Zelda game yet.

The Joy-Cons are fun to use in all configurations. I spent time with them connected to the system, with them plugged into the Joy-Con grip, and with them held in each hand with nothing connecting them. All three methods are responsive and surprisingly comfortable. In particular, holding the Joy-Cons separately feels like a natural evolution of the Nintendo Wii; there is no physical tether between the Joy-Cons, and each has both an analog stick and face buttons, so the controls are much more functional than the fewer, markedly asymmetrical controls on the Wii remote and nunchuck. Motion detection feels very accurate, and I could easily aim my bow by tilting the right controller.

Currently, you can’t copy or transfer your save files unless you have Nintendo Switch Online, and even then the cloud save function doesn’t work on some games. This is frustrating, since you still can’t simply put your saves on a USB drive in case something happens to your Switch (which is possible if you use it primarily as handheld system).

Should You Make the Switch?

The Nintendo Switch is a remarkably ambitious, clever game system concept that manages to live up to its promise of convenient switching between home console and gaming handheld. The Joy-Cons are smart, modular controllers that let the system work in a variety of ways, and the Switch itself has enough graphical power to run the best-looking Zelda and Mario games yet. The sheer number of options you have for playing are impressive, and even with the relatively weak battery life, just the ability to take the system anywhere without worrying about wires is one of the most useful additions we’ve seen to a home game system yet. It’s become a staple of my daily commute.

The Switch is an excellent game console and an excellent handheld. More importantly, it’s built a fantastic library of must-play games from both Nintendo and other publishers. It regularly sees noteworthy new titles, and ports of older games are given new life with the option to play them on the go. The inventive design of the Joy-Cons adds to the possibilities of the system, and enables projects like Labo.

That said, the Switch isn’t a perfect game console. It only reaches 1080p when the PS4 Pro and Xbox One X can both reach 4K (and the PS5 and Xbox Series X are capable of even better graphics and more impressive performance), and Nintendo saddles it with some strange and frustrating limitations. However, the home and portable experiences are incredibly fun, and there are so many games available on the system that are really worth your time, even if you’ve played some of them before. For these reasons, the Nintendo Switch is an Editors’ Choice pick for video game consoles.

For more in-depth video game talk, visit PCMag’s Pop-Off (Opens in a new window) YouTube channel.

Nintendo Switch Lite Review

I’ve been PCMag’s home entertainment expert for over 10 years, covering both TVs and everything you might want to connect to them. I’ve reviewed more than a thousand different consumer electronics products including headphones, speakers, TVs, and every major game system and VR headset of the last decade. I’m an ISF-certified TV calibrator and a THX-certified home theater professional, and I’m here to help you understand 4K, HDR, Dolby Vision, Dolby Atmos, and even 8K (and to reassure you that you don’t need to worry about 8K at all for at least a few more years).

Nintendo Switch Lite-01

The Bottom Line

The Nintendo Switch Lite is a slimmer, less expensive version of the standard Switch and one of the best handheld game systems to date.

PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

The Nintendo Switch is amazing. It can work as a gaming handheld by snapping its Joy-Con controllers onto its sides and holding it in your hands, or as a home console by putting it in its dock and connecting it to your TV, and it can switch between these modes in seconds. The Nintendo Switch Lite does half of that. It’s purely a handheld system, so arguably the "Switch" part of its name doesn’t really apply. It’s still an excellent system that offers the same portable gaming experience as the Switch, in a slightly smaller form factor, with a classic direction pad instead of direction buttons. And at $199.99, it’s $100 less than the Switch. If handheld gaming is all you’re looking for, the Switch Lite is an ideal system and our Editors’ Choice.

Slim and Solid

The Switch Lite looks like a Nintendo Switch in handheld mode with both Joy-Cons attached, but in a slightly smaller and slimmer design measuring 3.6 by 8.2 by 0.6 inches (HWD) and weighing 9.8 ounces. That’s nearly an ounce lighter than just the Switch tablet itself, and five ounces lighter than the Switch with two Joy-Cons attached. The system’s matte plastic shell feels very solid in the hand despite its lower weight, since it’s a single device with no seams between the screen and controls and no rails designed to let its different components come apart.

The layout of the Switch Lite is nearly identical to that of the standard Switch in handheld mode, and reminiscent of the PlayStation Vita. The center is dominated by a 5.5-inch touch LCD, with physical controls on wide grips on either side. The left side holds an analog stick, a minus button, a capture button, a bumper, a trigger, and direction controls in the form of a conventional plus-shaped pad. The right side holds another analog stick, A/B/X/Y face buttons, a plus button, a home button, a bumper, and a trigger.

The direction pad on the left side is a significant change from the Switch, since it replaces a cluster of four direction buttons on the left Joy-Con designed to provide the same controls while physically matching the face buttons on the right side. The Joy-Con buttons are functional, but many fans of classic games bemoan their feel and responsiveness for precise control in 2D games. The Switch Lite offers a welcome tweak, since the mirrored face/direction buttons were designed to let two people play with one Switch tablet and two Joy-Cons, a setup that isn’t particularly comfortable on its own and slightly downgrades the single-player experience.

The top edge of the Switch Lite features a game card slot, a headphone jack, a power button, and a volume rocker, along with a small ventilation grille. The grille has thicker teeth than the one on the regular Switch, which is a good sign; after a year or two of banging around in my bag, my Switch’s grille teeth broke off to expose the metal underneath. The plastic here feels less likely to snap.

The bottom edge of the Switch Lite has a microSD card slot behind a plastic door and a USB-C port for charging. The port is for charging only, and you can’t dock the system to output to a TV. There is no kickstand like there is on the Switch, and I don’t miss it. The kickstand on the Switch is flimsy, prone to popping off, leaves the microSD card slot uncovered when open, and doesn’t even hold the Switch up on a table very well. And you will want to use a microSD card; the Switch Lite has the same 32GB of storage as the Switch, and that space fills up fast.

There is one potential hiccup with the Switch Lite, and it’s one we haven’t seen in our review unit. The Switch’s Joy-Cons occasionally suffer from control drifting, where the analog sticks start to send directional inputs to the system when they aren’t being touched. Nintendo has been offering free repairs, and the detachable design of the Joy-Cons mean you can also just get a new set for your Switch. Since the controls on the Switch Lite are part of the system itself, you can’t simply replace them if they start to experience drift. Some users have already started reporting drift in their Switch Lites, but the extent of this is not yet known. Of course, drift might not become a widespread issue for the Switch Lite and it could be limited specifically to Joy-Cons. This was the case with the original Nintendo DS Lite and its hinge which was prone to cracking; later DS and 3DS versions didn’t experience that problem to nearly the same extent.

Screen and Power

The Switch Lite’s 5.5-inch screen is half an inch smaller than the Switch’s LCD, but offers a slightly sharper picture since it has the same 1,280-by-720 resolution for a higher pixel density. It’s also bright and colorful, like the regular Switch’s screen.

The system comes with a USB-C wall adapter, and that’s it. There’s no dock because the Switch Lite can’t output to a TV. Nintendo says the Switch Lite can last between three and seven hours before you have to charge it again, which is slightly better than the original Switch’s battery life (2.5 to 6.5 hours). Nintendo released an updated Switch with a bigger battery last August, which boasts a battery life of 4.5 to 9 hours.

The wide range of battery life for the Switch depends on both system features like screen brightness and wireless capability, and the processing power demanded by games; Nintendo uses The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild as a baseline, running three hours on an original Switch, four hours on a Switch Lite, and 5.5 hours on a new Switch.

Switching Over

The Nintendo Switch Lite has the same graphical capabilities as the standard Switch, and can play all of the same games that work with the Switch in handheld mode. This is the vast majority of Switch titles, though some, like 1, 2, Switch, won’t work. The system also lacks the HD Rumble feature of the Joy-Cons, or any rumble at all for that matter.

If you want to bring your games and saves from your original Switch to the Switch Lite, it’s generally very easy. Nintendo has largely fixed its early issues with account management, so you can simply create a user on the Switch Lite, link it to your Nintendo account, and download any games you own. If you have Nintendo Switch Online, you can then sync most of your files from cloud saves on the service. Nintendo Switch Online doesn’t support cloud saves for all games, though, and some notable titles like Dark Souls Remastered, Pokemon: Let’s Go, Eevee/Pikachu, and Splatoon 2 don’t have cloud save functionality. Fortunately, you can also directly transfer your games and settings from your Switch locally, though there is no way to simply copy save files from the storage or microSD card to another microSD card, or otherwise store or transfer them with your computer.

Handheld Only

Because the Switch Lite is designed as a handheld device and has no TV output functionality, it’s much more limited than the Switch in use. While the Switch can be docked and played on TV, and its detachable Joy-Cons and kickstand ensure that at least two players can enjoy it while on the go, the Switch Lite is meant to be used almost solely in your own two hands. The system supports wireless controllers, and you can pair a Switch Pro Controller, 8Bitdo SM30 Pro+, or Joy-Cons to it. Of course, without a stand, you’ll need to devise your own way to hold the system up for multiple players to look at the screen (or get a third-party charging stand).

Whether this limitation is a deal breaker depends on your taste, and, if you already own one, how you use your current Switch. I overwhelmingly use mine in handheld mode, and it’s become a staple of my commute. I rarely use the system docked and because of this, the smaller, lighter, less expensive Switch Lite is very appealing. If you use the Switch for any appreciable amount of time docked to your TV, or if you can see yourself doing so, the Switch Lite won’t cut it.

A firmware update in 2021 added Bluetooth audio support to the Switch and Switch Lite. This lets you pair Bluetooth headphones to the system, allowing a non-wired option for listening to your games. It’s a welcome addition, even four years into the platform’s life.

I played some games on the Switch Lite and, unsurprisingly, it feels nearly identical to playing the same games on the Switch. While the screen is slightly smaller, it’s still big, bright, and sharp enough for me to enjoy using it. The direction pad is a definite improvement, especially for games like Shovel Knight and anything on the Nintendo Switch Online NES or SNES libraries (which is why I replaced my left Joy-Con with a Hori Joy-Con equipped with a direction pad, though only works in handheld mode). River City Girls and The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening both look and feel just as good as they do on the full Switch. Comparing handheld modes, you won’t see any negative differences here.

A Near-Perfect Portable

The Nintendo Switch Lite is a fantastic little handheld, even if it isn’t as revolutionary as its older, larger sibling. You can’t switch between using it as a home console connected to your TV and as a portable game system in your hands on a whim, and that definitely limits its flexibility. How much that limitation matters to you depends on how you want to use it. The Switch Lite costs two-thirds the price of the Switch, and if all you want is to play Nintendo’s latest games (and a massive library of excellent indie titles and classic ports) on a handheld, it’s an amazing deal. If you want to play those games on your TV, it isn’t for you.

The Switch Lite is the best Nintendo handheld yet from a company with the greatest and most influential history of portable game systems, and that earns it our Editors’ Choice designation. It just isn’t a home game console, and you should keep that in mind when making your choice between the Switch Lite and the Switch.

For more in-depth video game talk, visit PCMag’s Pop-Off (Opens in a new window) YouTube channel.

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