Nintendo Reportedly ‘Almost Discouraging’ Switch 2 Development as Studios Told to Launch Games on Switch 1 and Rely on Backwards Compatibility Instead


A fresh report has detailed the difficulties faced by some developers keen to launch games for Switch 2 — but who remain unable to do so due to a lack of Nintendo support.

According to Digital Foundry, Nintendo is still restricting its supply of Switch 2 development hardware and instead telling some studios to launch their titles as Switch 1 games that can then be played via backwards compatibility.

This has sparked frustration among a number of developers, including at least one major AAA studio unable to launch a Switch 2-native version of their game, while hardware is given to some indie creators — including the team behind a campfire simulator.

“There’s been a lot of talk about this lately, that Nintendo seems to be almost discouraging Switch 2 development to some degree,” Digital Foundry’s John Linneman said during the team’s most recent podcast. “I’ve spoken with plenty of developers where they were told that their game, they should just ship it on Switch 1 and rely on backwards compatibility.

“There’s a lot of developers that are unable to get Switch 2 dev kits,” Linneman continued. “We talked to a lot of devs at Gamescom this year, and so many of them said the same things. They want to ship on Switch 2. They would love to do Switch 2 versions. They can’t get the hardware. It’s really difficult right now.”

One particular frustration has been the lack of transparency from Nintendo on why some studios have been given Switch 2 development kits, while others have not. IGN has contacted Nintendo for comment.

“I don’t really know what Nintendo’s mindset was with these sets of decisions,” Digital Foundry’s Oliver Mackenzie said. “I don’t really understand the strategy because, like you said, even now developers are struggling to get systems, and I know that some months ago when we were hearing things through the grapevine and talking to people, there were some weird exclusions with some big developers struggling to get kits for games.

“From what we’ve heard, there were some weird inclusions as well,” he continued. “Some indies were included, which is nice to see. But there’s that campfire game, you know, the camera campfire game, and they’re getting kits. And some big developers, on the other hand, who developed AAA stuff, aren’t necessarily in the pipeline there for kits.”

The camera campfire game here in question is Chillin’ by the Fire, an indie hangout game set around a campfire which makes use of the Switch 2 camera. On the one hand, the simple fact this makes use of GameChat and the Switch 2’s camera capabilities makes this impossible to launch on Switch 1, meaning that development hardware for Nintendo’s newer console would be required. On the other, it’s understandable why some AAA developers might be surprised to see this launch, after being told they wouldn’t yet receive a Switch 2 development kit for themselves.

“There’s weird stuff about discouraging Switch 2 development explicitly for some games, a limited subset of games like if you’re doing a pixel art game at 240p, you probably don’t need a Switch 2 kit,” Mackenzie added. “But there are very few games on the Switch 1 that wouldn’t benefit from being ported explicitly to Switch 2.

“The thing that’s really stark to me too is, at this point, we’ve seen very few proper Switch 2 Editions post-launch. I don’t think we’ve seen any, hardly at all really, from third-party developers in particular. Obviously we saw No Man’s Sky, I think one or two other games in the mix there. But really, it’s been a very slow trickle of titles earning that Switch 2 Edition badge.

“I really want to see more movement on that front. I hope it’s a temporary thing,” Mackenzie concluded. “I hope that in a year or two, we’re looking back and we’re like, that was a really weird decision, but it was fixed in time. I hope that’s what we’re looking at.”

Earlier today, it was reported that Nintendo was planning a fresh Direct due this September, with fan hopes high for word on Metroid Prime 4 and Mario details.

Tom Phillips is IGN’s News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social

Related Content

The iBuypower RTX 5060 Prebuilt Drops to Just $899

Duet Night Abyss Dev Team Discusses the Game’s Narrative, Combat, and Latest Updates

How One Magic: The Gathering Designer Broke All the Rules and Created a Sensation

Leave a Comment