I haven't seen a single time where motion control was forced in Switch gameplay, so far.
I am not sure it would yet to be honest.
I... um. Me fail English, please rephrase? Or clarify?
Also Re: who it's being marketed do, I don't think it's really possible to pin down a coherent group of people for something as broadly defined as the Switch. Closest I can come up with is my somewhat inaccurate and maybe insulting statement of "If you have a home console, if all you need is a home console, and you don't care for Nintendo exclusives, the Switch may be not for you". So it's, like, three qualifiers. People who have no home console, and/or people who want more than just a home console, and/or people who care for Nintendo exclusives. The latter would buy the next Nintendo console regardless of what form-factor it took - the exclusive games are drawing them in, and the Switch is pretty strong on that front so far, with some good games throughout the year and maybe more to come. The former is the weakest of the three, since the Switch is only starting out and can't boast a big back-catalog like the PS4 and XBOne can - for people who are choosing their first console the Switch is an option, but not the most appealing one without the other two factors. And it's the third, middle factor that really matters here, I think. Its draw is not as strong as the draw of exclusive games, but for people who want more than just a stationary gaming system, whether or not they have one already, the Switch offers something promising. Vita is a contender here, as are regular tablets and Nintendo's own handhelds, but the Switch is
more than any one of those, and for a comparable price.
So... yeah. It's that broad, slightly amorphous group of people that I see the Switch as being marketed towards. It's barely competing for the position of a primary home console outside of the brand-loyal fanbase, but it's doing pretty well so far for that fanbase, and its claim to the spot of a companion platform is pretty strong. At least, that's the way I see it.
The Switch has, as well, with some very dumb presentations
Eh. They literally showed off two games. The entire presentation was focused on what sets the Switch apart from other consoles, and they had just two games to showcase it. I don't think it's fair to expect them to have made do with less, seeing as they had both the strictly casual and the semi-pro hemispheres to cover.