New Nintendo Switch 2 Model Leak Reveals Redesigned LCD Screen (2026)

A leaked display panel points to a new Nintendo Switch 2 hardware revision, and it is not the OLED screen fans have been asking for since launch. Nintendo Patents Watch spotted a Sharp LCD panel listed on a Chinese resale site on June 29, 2026, carrying a model number that does not match anything currently shipping. If you are on the fence about buying a Switch 2 right now, this leak actually matters to your decision.

What Leaked and Where

The panel carries the model number LS079T1SX10P. It is a 7.9-inch Sharp LTPS LCD rated at 1080p, the same size and resolution as the screen already in every Switch 2 on shelves today. The circuit layout and connector configuration are different enough from the current panel that this looks like more than a simple parts swap between suppliers.

Nintendo has not confirmed any of this. There is no release date, no price, and no official statement. Everything below is based on the leaked component and reporting from outlets that track Nintendo’s supply chain, not a company announcement.

Why People Are Upset About the Current Screen

The Switch 2 shipped with a 7.9-inch LCD running 1080p at 120Hz with VRR, HDR10, and wide color support. On paper that is a strong spec sheet for a handheld. In practice, players noticed ghosting from day one. Fast-moving objects leave a faint trail behind them, especially in dark scenes or games with quick horizontal scrolling.

The panel’s pixel response time sits around 17 milliseconds, slow enough that motion blur shows up during fast camera pans, side-scrollers, and anything with high contrast movement. Nintendo has never publicly addressed the complaint, even as it became one of the most repeated criticisms of the console.

If you have not seen it yourself, ghosting looks like a faint smear trailing behind a moving object, similar to what budget monitors did before fast IPS panels became standard. It is most obvious in dark UI menus with scrolling text, platformers with quick horizontal movement, and any game with a fast-panning camera. Slower, story-driven games rarely show it at all, which is why some owners never notice the issue and others cannot unsee it.

SpecCurrent Switch 2 PanelLeaked Panel (LS079T1SX10P)
Size7.9 inches7.9 inches
Resolution1080p1080p
Panel typeLCDSharp LTPS LCD
Refresh rate120Hz with VRRUnconfirmed
Response time~17ms (known ghosting)Unconfirmed
Circuit/connector designOriginal layoutRedesigned layout

Does the New Panel Actually Fix Ghosting?

Nobody knows yet. Same size, same resolution, different internals. That pattern is consistent with a panel built to cut response time without changing anything else about the display specs. It is also consistent with Sharp simply swapping in a newer production line with no performance change at all.

Until someone gets a retail unit in hand and runs an actual pixel response test, treat this as a leak with real evidence behind it, not a confirmed fix. Reporting on the panel has been consistent across multiple outlets, so the component itself is real. What it does once it ships is still a guess.

A Second Switch 2 Revision Is Already Confirmed

While the screen is still a leak, Nintendo has already confirmed a separate Switch 2 revision. Starting February 18, 2027, EU regulation requires consumer electronics batteries to be user-replaceable. Nintendo confirmed a new model carrying an “OSM” product code, replacing the current “BEE” code, that includes a removable battery for both the console and the Joy-Con controllers.

Today’s Switch 2 needs roughly 32 steps, specialized JIS screwdrivers, adhesive remover, and thermal putty just to reach the battery. The OSM model fixes that, but it is currently tied to the EU market and the regulation deadline, not a global relaunch.

Two separate revisions, two separate reasons. Nobody at Nintendo has said whether the screen change and the battery change will ship in the same hardware run, or arrive as two unrelated updates months apart.

Nintendo Has Done This Before

Quiet mid-cycle revisions are a Nintendo habit, not a new idea. The original Switch got a battery life bump in 2019 with a new board revision, distinguished only by a hidden suffix on the model number. Most buyers never noticed until they checked the label. That revised board also became the base for the Switch Lite later that year, and eventually the OLED model in 2021.

The pattern usually looks the same. A part changes for cost, supply, or a real complaint. Nintendo never announces it directly. Buyers only find out from a teardown, a leaked panel, or a regulatory filing, which is exactly how both Switch 2 revisions surfaced this time.

How to Check Which Switch 2 You Have

Flip your console over. The product code is printed on the bottom near the regulatory text. Current units read “BEE-001.” If a revised model ships, expect a new code stamped in that same spot, the same way Nintendo distinguished the original Switch’s “HAC” revisions over the years with small suffix changes.

Should You Wait to Buy a Switch 2?

If ghosting does not bother you, buy now. Most players never notice it outside of fast 2D scrolling games or dark, high-motion scenes. If you have played a Switch 2 in a store and the blur was distracting, waiting makes sense.

There is no release date for the new panel and no confirmation it reaches North American retail at all. Realistically that means months, not weeks, before this shows up on shelves, if it does. If you need a Switch 2 today, buy the current model and treat any future revision as a bonus rather than something to plan around.

Docked play sidesteps the whole issue anyway. Ghosting is a handheld-mode problem tied to the built-in LCD, so anyone who mostly plays on a TV through the dock will not see it regardless of which panel revision ships. It only matters if handheld mode is where you spend most of your time.

Check price on Amazon

Nintendo has two hardware revisions in motion for the Switch 2 this year: a battery fix forced by EU law, and a screen change nobody asked for but plenty of people want. Neither has a confirmed ship date, and neither is guaranteed to land at the same time. Wait for an official Nintendo statement before you build a purchase decision around either one.

About the Author
Rotem
I have personally tested the Steam Deck, ROG Ally, ROG Ally X, Retroid Pocket 5, Anbernic RG556, and Lenovo Legion Go. I built The Respawn Rig because I was tired of hunting through outdated forums every time I had a question about portable gaming. Everything I write here is based on real hands-on time with the hardware.

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