The Nintendo Switch 2 reveal was exciting but will it entice you to upgrade?
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Well, it happened: Nintendo announced the Switch 2 the day after last weeks newsletter went out. And a strange announcement it was.The Guardians journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link.Learn more.The short trailer (which you can watch here) tells you everything we know at this point: everything about the machine except for its appearance remains a mystery. Nintendo has scheduled a reveal event for April that will presumably be more fulsome. This was likely Nintendos plan all along, and the trailer was released early following a flood of leaked information about the console. They provided no release date, no details and no games.This makes any deep analysis of the Switch 2 feel speculative. Its notable this is an iterative console, just like the Switch in form but bigger and more powerful and with a few new features. Its not a total curveball like the motion-controlled Wii, or indeed the original Switch, whose hybrid at-home/on-the-go functionality was a world-first in 2017. Im holding out for some fun, yet-to-be-announced gimmick, like the 3DSs augmented reality camera that let you see Nintendo characters posing on your desk.Since 2017, though, other companies have released hybrid consoles. The Steam Deck has been a huge deal for people with depressing backlogs of unplayed PC games, letting them play Elden Ring on the plane. (Nobody knows quite how many units it has sold but 10m is a fair estimate, which admittedly pales in comparison to the Switchs 150m.) PlayStations Portal, a controller with a very appealing screen spliced in the middle that lets you play PS5 games in your hands, is a half-step towards a portable PS5. Microsoft is also exploring an Xbox handheld, though this will be a few years off yet.The question for Nintendo is whether people want to upgrade from the console that they already have, with its tremendous library of games particularly well-suited to families. But perhaps Nintendo doesnt have to stake its fortunes on selling tens of millions of new consoles in the first year on sale. The companys games and characters are only growing in popularity and influence: between the Mario movies, Universal Studios theme parks, a new museum in Kyoto and the ongoing success of the Switch, Nintendo is at the height of its fortunes and less dependent on its core business than it at any point in its history.The Steam Deck has been a huge deal for people with depressing backlogs of unplayed PC games.Like many Japanese companies, Nintendo operates conservatively. Rather than loading itself with debt in the American tradition, which can make every new product launch a do-or-die gamble, it maintains enormous cash reserves; it reportedly held 3,071bn yen (more than 16bn) in assets as of last September. This war chest has enabled Nintendo to weather the occasional flop, and take a medium- to long-term view on its games and properties rather than continually appeasing shareholders in the short-term. Its why the company has continually defied the armchair analysts who have been insisting it is doomed to become a third-party publisher, putting its games on other companies consoles, since the days of the GameCube in the early 2000s.Whatever happens with the Switch 2 in its early years, Nintendo will not be in existential danger. Perhaps a relatively safe bet such as this one its just like what youve already got, but better! might free Nintendo up to pursue its trademark innovation elsewhere. The mad toy maker side of the company showed up recently in Alarmo, a motion-detecting alarm clock that wakes you up with Nintendo music. Its been a while since Nintendo Labo, a series of delightful cardboard contraptions brought to life by Switch controllers, but all the people who made those things are still working at the company, and I doubt their creativity is being suppressed.As ever in this business, it will all come down to the actual games. Only one of those shows up in the Switch 2 reveal trailer: brief footage of a new Mario Kart that, hilariously, Nintendo has yet to officially confirm. Come April, I will be holding out for something like Breath of the Wild, which launched with the original Switch and completely remade open-world video games. But failing that, Id settle for a new Rhythm Heaven. Its well overdue a revival.What to playLonely Mountains: Snow Riders. Photograph: Megagon IndustriesBack in 2019 and 2020, I found peace in a downhill biking game called Lonely Mountains Downhill, whose minimalist yet exacting gameplay go fast, dont die and nature soundscapes soothed me. Its sequel, Lonely Mountains: Snow Riders, came out yesterday, and instead of a bike youre now on skis, and you can race others or try to make it down the mountain as a team in multiplayer.This is not an easy game but it feels so good when you get a feel for the minute adjustments to your trajectory that you need to make to fly down the slopes without smacking face first into a rock. Fans of the old Trials games should definitely check it out.Available on: Xbox, PC Estimated playtime: skip past newsletter promotionSign up to Pushing ButtonsFree weekly newsletterKeza MacDonald's weekly look at the world of gamingPrivacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.after newsletter promotionWhat to readElon Musk. Photograph: Getty ImagesIts been a fun week on my beat. A slew of YouTubers and streamers have accused Elon Musk of pretending to be good at video games, after Musk played a game live on X and appeared to have little understanding of what he was doing. He has since admitted to boosting paying other people to play for him on his accounts after his Path of Exile 2 character was seen grinding away whilst Musk attended Trumps inauguration.In an interview with the New York Times, Inkle Studios cofounder Jon Ingold laments that video game writing isnt good enough. He calls critical darling RPG Disco Elysium overwritten and tedious, an unpopular opinion I happen to share.Sony has cancelled several unannounced in-development live-service games, including one based on God of War and one based on Horizon, according to various reports. (Sony has confirmed two cancellations via a spokesperson.) Is the tide finally turning away from these expensive and, lets be honest, increasingly predictable mega-games?When TikTok briefly went offline in the US over the weekend after a supreme court decision upheld a ban, another app became collateral damage: Marvel Snap, which is also published by TikToks owner ByteDance. At the time of writing, the game remains banned in the US.What to clickQuestion BlockTakaya Imamuras artwork for the SNES racing game F-ZERO. Photograph: NintendoReader Adam asks a timely question:If there arent many surprises coming in the Switch 2s technology, what surprises would you like to see in terms of games for it? Is there a long-forgotten Nintendo franchise youd like to see resurrected? Id love for the Everybody Votes channel make a return. It was everything weird and fun about Nintendo in the mid-2000s.I mentioned Rhythm Heaven at the end there, a Wario Ware-style music mini-game collection with a touch of the bizarre, but there are a few more good candidates for this. Star Fox! F-Zero! (We recently ran a great interview with one of the F-Zero series lead artists from the 1990s, who is working on his own sci-fi game.) I would love to see something like the StreetPass functionality of the DS, where other peoples avatars would visit your console if you walked past them when out and about. Lonely Mountains has got me in the mood for another Excitebike, too. Im going to nail this down and say Star Fox, because I think its the most likely. Readers: what would you like to see, come Aprils reveal event?If youve got a question for Question Block or anything else to say about the newsletter hit reply or email us on pushingbuttons@theguardian.com.
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