Not exact matches
There is no
analog for climate change as humans have
triggered it, so our sensitivities are even less sure than the science suggests, even with Earth System Sensitivity since it also presumably doesn't account for rate of change nor the preconditioning the human presence has resulted in.
While there are issues to work through such as the lack of
analog triggers on the Switch (something which theoretically makes Super Mario Sunshine unplayable, for instance) it
does seem like the next natural conclusion for the virtual console.
The problem with Super Mario Sunshine and Luigi's Mansion is that they both utilize the
analog triggers of the GameCube controller, and these simply don't exist on the Wii U.
I think the statement «The aren't any real technical limitations to bring GameCube games to the Wii U.» is a little biased, for one it doesn't have any
analog triggers so it would be impossible to finish games such as Mario Sunshine where this feature is heavily used, also, anything from that generation is particular hard to emulate.
(I
do wonder what will that mean for the potential of having GameCube Virtual Console titles, some of which rely on those old
analog triggers, though.)
Having
analog trigger doing something crucial in an action game is bad (why
did you put the dodge in Bayonetta on
analog trigger, Kamiya, why).
Different shot types are mapped to the face buttons and
triggers, though you
do have the option of being able to play shots with the right
analog stick, as well.
You use the
triggers to accelerate and reverse, while the shoulder buttons allow you to
do tricks by holding it down and pressing various ways on the
analog stick.
Does the tablet controller have
analog triggers?
Moving the left
analog stick forward will
trigger the classic breaststroke movement, and holding X whilst
doing so will force CJ to switch to freestyle mode.
They're responsive enough, though the fact the Switch doesn't have proper
analog triggers will always haunt me when playing a shooter on that console.
This is
done by using the
trigger in combination with the
analog stick, or via the touchscreen on the Nintendo Switch (a new feature found only on this platform).
With swappable parts for the directional pad to change how it feels, different
analog stick tops of different heights to give you more precise aim,
trigger locks for rapid fire and programmable paddle buttons on the back of the controller so you don't have to take your thumbs off the
analog sticks to use the face buttons, the Elite controller really can change the way you play PC games.
I have a Wii U and also love Nintendo products, but the one thing worth noting about the Nintendo stuff is that the Switch Pro pad and the Wii U Pro don't have
analog triggers.