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Switch 2 Just Got a New Screen Spotted — Should You Be Excited or Skeptical?

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Switch 2 Just Got a New Screen Spotted — Should You Be Excited or Skeptical? - Image 1
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1 hour ago vpesports

The screen has been one of the most consistent sore points in Nintendo Switch 2 reviews. Not because the display is objectively bad, but because everyone remembers how the OLED upgrade made the original Switch’s LCD feel like a downgrade by comparison. Now, a year after the Switch 2 launched, a new detail has surfaced online that immediately got the community buzzing — a photo of an LCD panel with an unfamiliar label, listed on a Chinese trading platform.

The problem is that the hype got ahead of the facts.

What Panel Was Found, and Why Sharp Matters Here

A Chinese resale platform for components turned up a module labeled LS079T1SX10P. That’s not a part number that has ever officially surfaced from Nintendo — which is exactly why it caused a stir. Analysts at Nintendo Patents Watch decoded the designation and concluded it likely points to a Sharp panel using LTPS technology, with a 7.9-inch diagonal and 1080p resolution — technically the same specs as the current Switch 2 display.

The key detail isn’t the size or resolution, though — it’s the manufacturer. The current console uses a panel from Innolux. The new module, based on photos from the listing, shows a different layout of components, a different connector type, and different cable routing — and that’s not a cosmetic detail, it points to a genuinely different engineering design under the hood.

Sharp Instead of Innolux: An Upgrade, or Just a Supplier Swap?

This is where it’s worth slowing down before jumping to “OLED Switch 2” conclusions. LTPS is still an LCD technology — just a more advanced variant with better refresh capability and power efficiency compared to a standard IPS panel. It is not OLED, and there’s no indication of an actual organic-LED screen at this point.

There’s also a nuance that often gets lost in the retelling: according to Nintendo Patents Watch, Sharp isn’t actually a new name in this supply chain. The original Switch 2 LCD module may have already used Sharp LTPS glass before final assembly was handled by Innolux. In other words, the newly surfaced panel could just as easily reflect a shift in assembly or sourcing as it could a genuine second-generation screen revision.

Unofficial render of the Nintendo Switch 2 rear side showcasing the console's design and a possible new LCD display panel

One more detail worth noting: Sharp previously stated in its financial reporting that it had expanded component production for mobile applications starting in September 2025 — meaning the manufacturing capacity for new orders lines up roughly with the right timeframe.

Comparison: Current Switch 2 Screen vs. the Newly Found Panel

Spec Current Switch 2 Screen Newly Found Sharp Panel
Manufacturer Innolux Sharp
Technology LCD LCD (likely LTPS)
Diagonal 7.9 inches 7.9 inches
Resolution 1080p 1080p
Part Label known, standard LS079T1SX10P, previously unseen
Connector & Wiring standard for current model different

Why Players Are Hoping for an OLED Switch 2 in the First Place

The frustration with the Switch 2 screen didn’t come out of nowhere, and it’s worth laying out the context for anyone still deciding whether to buy in:

  • the original Switch got its OLED revision four years after launch, and it meaningfully improved contrast and color saturation in handheld mode;
  • the Switch 2’s LCD panel, despite improvements over the older model, still falls short of OLED when it comes to black depth — especially noticeable in dark scenes or low-light play;
  • Nintendo’s hardware pattern suggests an OLED revision is likely to happen eventually — the real question is timing, not whether it’ll happen at all.

What This Means If You’re Considering Buying a Switch 2 Right Now

Short version: it’s too early to change your plans. The panel that surfaced isn’t a press release, a patent describing a new console, or even a leak from a reliable insider — it’s a photo of a component on a resale marketplace that outside analysts interpreted after the fact. The find on its own could mean almost anything, from a routine supplier swap for manufacturing reasons to early groundwork for a full “Switch 2 OLED” revision, which — based on the original console’s history — wouldn’t realistically arrive for another year or two.

Anyone holding off on a purchase specifically for a better screen is better off watching for an official Nintendo announcement rather than scattered finds on Asian trading platforms — the company has historically confirmed hardware revisions months ahead of release rather than letting rumors do the talking. And for anyone who needs a console right now, there’s not much to worry about: the current Switch 2 screen, criticism aside, remains a solid and capable display for the vast majority of gaming scenarios.

So yes, the find is genuinely interesting, and it’s worth keeping an eye on. But calling it confirmation of a new OLED Switch 2 model is, for now, premature.

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