The fascination with "g extra quality" and NSP downloads underscores a critical flaw in the official product: the lack of post-launch support. While the game ran acceptably, it was rarely "optimal." For a console that thrives on pick-up-and-play portability, a wrestling game is a natural fit. Yet, the grind-heavy economy of the game—which incentivized microtransactions to unlock wrestlers—and the performance instability drove many players toward the modded route. By downloading the NSP version, players could often mod the game files to adjust stats, unlock content immediately, or apply overclocks to the Switch CPU to stabilize the frame rate—options not available to the average retail consumer.