An Inventor Used a Nintendo Switch and Labo to Operate a Wheelchair

Since the very beginning, NintendoOpens in a new tab has been all about creating innovative experiences with their video game controllers. Like, here’s a fun fact: The NESOpens in a new tab controller was the one that popularized the D-pad that has been on virtually every game controller since. Since then, whether it’s the unconventional N64Opens in a new tab and GameCubeOpens in a new tab controllers, the WiiOpens in a new tab remote, the Wii UOpens in a new tab game pad, or the current Nintendo SwitchOpens in a new tab Joy-Cons, Nintendo has always thought differently when it comes to input.

The Joy-Con is particularly interesting because of how versatile it is, as the cardboard Labo kits proveOpens in a new tab. There are so many things you can do with a Joy-Con or two, like go fishingOpens in a new tab, play “All Star” by Smash MouthOpens in a new tab, and now, operate a wheelchair (via KotakuOpens in a new tab).

https://twitter.com/Takeru_FTX/status/991267031520460800

One of the Toy-Con Labo kits you can get is a motorbikeOpens in a new tab, which turns your Joy-Cons into handlebars you use to play a first-person racing game. Meanwhile, Japanese researcher and inventor Kentaro Yoshifuji has been developing new technology to improve wheelchairs since he was in high school, and for a 13-year-old boy who is bound to a wheelchair due to a heart condition, he somehow rigged up the motorbike Labo kit to the kid’s wheelchair, so he can operate it the same way he would control the in-game bike.

Yoshifuji captioned one of the videos (via Google Translate), “The wheelchair is not a vehicle exclusively for people with physical disabilities, but it should be a convenient ride that anyone can use. My son who often thought that, “I am sorry just to have fun while everyone is walking.” It rushed up to the driving style. The shortage of the body is not only negative.”

What other unexpected ways do you think the Joy-Cons and Nintendo Labo could be used? Let us know what you think in the comments below?

Featured image: Nintendo

More chariots await: