The Switch never stutters. 60 FPS. Crisp textures. No lag.
For weeks, Leo had been chasing a ghost. Attack on Titan 2: Final Battle . Not the cartridge—those were scalped to oblivion, priced like Survey Corps rations outside Wall Rose. Not the eShop version—his internet was a cruel joke, a dial-up ghost haunting a fiber-optic world. No, he needed the NSP. The digital install file. The forbidden fruit of the homebrew scene.
A new tile. Attack on Titan 2: Final Battle . The icon shows Eren, Mikasa, and Armin silhouetted against a blazing sky. The word FINAL BATTLE is stamped across the bottom in bold red letters. Attack On Titan 2 SWITCH NSP -Final Battle- -DL... --INSTALL
The Switch sits in its dock, screen dark, waiting. Leo has already backed up his NAND. He's done the research. He knows that installing an NSP is like performing a ritual. You need the right tools: Tinfoil (the GUI version, not the command line—he's not a masochist), or DBI. He prefers DBI. It feels more like piloting a Survey Corps airship: technical, precise, dangerous.
His hand trembles slightly as he presses A. The Switch never stutters
"Ignore required firmware version?" Yes. His Switch is on 15.0.1. The game probably demands 16.1.0. He has the latest sigpatches. He trusts them like he trusts Levi's blade maintenance.
The Switch chimes.
There it is.