The fate of the liquid crystal display? The newly obtained "Nintendo Switch". If you're thinking of enjoying the game, there are missing dots on the screen! Nintendo's response to such a report was, "It's not a flaw."
If you look at the official Nintendo UK troubleshooting site, it certainly says:
The presence of a small number of constantly lit / non-lit pixels is unique to LCD displays. This is normal and not a defect.
This is a problem I often hear about products equipped with a liquid crystal display. Once you find it, you'll always be worried about it.
Even now that the manufacturing technology of liquid crystal displays has developed, such missing dots still exist. Manufacturers have responded differently, for example, HP's (Hewlett-Packard) Limited Warranty covers "perfect pixel imperfections" in monitors manufactured after May 2009. However, it is a little difficult to understand that up to 5 sub-pixel abnormalities are allowed.
The replacement policy for the Nintendo Switch is unknown at this time, but Gizmodo is currently inquiring about this. Also, in 2004, Nintendo repaired the missing dots on the "Nintendo DS", and maybe there will be some progress in the future ... Maybe, though.
-"Nintendo Switch" Review: "Play Games" and "Play Games". The ultimate evolution of game hardware that can switch between two types of play-Nintendo Switch, what a MacBook Pro "to" was rechargeable- "Nintendo Switch" disassembled repo. It looks pretty easy to fix!
top image: Imgursource: Nintendo UK via Reddit, Imgur, HP, Eurogamer.net Reference: Tested
Rhett Jones --Gizmodo US [Original] (Naoki Tsukamoto)