A user posted, which I edited into a question. Between the time I could write up my answer and post it, some bickering broke out over in the comments on a non-answer posted by the OP and the question was locked. Please unlock it.
I've got a valid answer.
According to the documentation, you actually can load a nib based view controller without naming it exactly the same thing. You're almost right, but there's a second case, which should work even with Swift:
If you use a nib file to store your view controller's view, it is recommended that you specify that nib file explicitly when initializing your view controller. However, if you do not specify a nib name, and do not override the loadView method in your custom subclass, the view controller searches for a nib file using other means. Specifically, it looks for a nib file with an appropriate name (without the .nib extension) and loads that nib file whenever its view is requested. Specifically, it looks (in order) for a nib file with one of the following names:
If the view controller class name ends with the word ‘Controller’, as in MyViewController, it looks for a nib file whose name matches the class name without the word ‘Controller’, as in MyView.nib.
It looks for a nib file whose name matches the name of the view controller class. For example, if the class name is MyViewController, it looks for a MyViewController.nib file.