If it has an X1 chip, simply put, it cannot match the PS4 or Xbox One, or even come close. X1 is a very powerful mobile chip, more powerful than the Wii U, no doubt, but it is nowhere near the level of the current generation. However, the hope to still grasp on to, is where Nvidia said, "Nintendo Switch is powered by the performance of the custom Tegra processor. The high-efficiency scalable processor includes an NVIDIA GPU based on the same architecture as the world’s top-performing GeForce gaming graphics cards." The world's top performing GeForce gaming graphics cards, at the time of that press release (blog post), were the GTX 1070, etc. which are Pascal cards. So here's for holding out hope that the X1 was simply in development kits, and something newer than the X1 is what's in the actual hardware. It seems extremely unlikely though, at this point. But 1 GHz CPU, 4 GB RAM, 750 MHz GPU (300 MHz for "undocked" mode) is not sounding too promising. Sure, if we can get some games that are on par with beautiful Wii U games like Mario Kart 8 (which only runs at 720p, mind you), then that's great. And also, there is no excuse for the Switch to not support 4K video streaming services (right out of the box), because the Nvidia Shield Android TV does this already (and 4K gaming, but lets not even think about that now). Pretty disappointing that the CPU is clocked so low though. The Tegra X1 in the Shield (and Pixel C) runs at 1.9 GHz.