Since the Switch’s launch announcement on 1/12, Nintendo has been doing a poor job communicating what is and isn’t exclusive to the smartphone app they will be launching in the summer that lets players chat and communicate over their mobile phone.

Fans have been worried that Nintendo’s vague wording means the ONLY way to voice chat with other players will be the app itself. This is despite the fact that Mario Kart 8 ships months before the app is set to release and includes matchmaking, a feature once thought to be exclusive to the app.

Additionally, Nintendo has images on their website, like the one you see at the top of this post, showing gamers using traditional headsets with microphones plugged into the Switch’s 3.5mm headphone jack. It really seems like this is a case of bad communication on Nintendo’s part and that voice chat on the Switch won’t be exclusive to the app.

Now, a new listing for a gaming headset on GameStop’s official weekly ad shows a Afterglow headset, complete with a microphone. You can see a picture of the ad, which features the Switch and this headset, on the first page below.

This isn’t where it stops. Here’s how Afterglow describes the headset:

Experience your favorite games without boundaries and stay connected to friends during exciting adventures with the Afterglow LVL 3 Gaming Stereo Headset for Nintendo Switch. Block out distractions with the flexible boom and noise-canceling microphone and adjust volume with the easily accessible in-line controls. Plug in your headset to your system, marvel at the crystal clear sound design brought to you through powerful 40mm Neodymium drivers, and bring the full Nintendo Switch gaming experience to life. Designed for the Nintendo Switch system

Powerful 40mm Neodymium drivers for incredible audio

Flexible boom and noise-canceling microphone

Sleek comfortable ear cup design

Easy-to-access in-line chat volume and mute controls

Nintendo could be more clear on their messaging, for sure. Perhaps they just thought they didn’t need to tell us you could chat in traditional ways, using a headset plugged into the headphone jack like on Xbox One and PS4, because they thought it was so standard that people would just assume.

While this isn’t 100% confirmation, it really does seem like Nintendo’s poor messaging made a mountain out of nothing. So put your pitchforks down guys, the Switch most likely supports normal voice chat through normal headsets.