Midway-AGNC-
Member
One thing that has been bothering me lately is how little Nintendo is willing to show about its future, especially now that we're heading into the Switch 2 era. Right now, this is basically what we know is coming:
A part of this lineup is made up of re-releases or enhanced versions. That's fine as supporting content, but even if you count Splatoon as a system seller, which it arguably is for a large portion of Nintendo's audience, where is the big, forward-looking hit that generates long-term hype for 2026 and beyond? There's still no clear flagship reveal on the horizon, no major new IP, and no ambitious sequel that signals what the platform's future really looks like.
What makes this feel worse is the contrast with what we just saw at the Video Game Awards. Other publishers weren't shy about revealing games planned not only for 2026, but even further out. Whether those games slip or not is beside the point. Those announcements give players a sense of direction, a roadmap, and confidence that something substantial is being built.
Nintendo's philosophy, on the other hand, still revolves around announcing games at the last possible moment. One of the most common defenses of this strategy is the idea that announcing games early is inherently bad, because some titles end up being revealed five years before launch. But that's an extremely binary and exaggerated way of framing the issue. The alternative to announcing a game five years early isn't to announce everything two months before release and keep the future completely opaque. There is a wide middle ground between those extremes.
Even vague reveals, early teasers, or project confirmations help establish momentum and long-term confidence. Right now, Nintendo's silence doesn't feel disciplined, it feels unnecessarily closed off. Instead of building anticipation, it creates uncertainty and invites speculation about whether the next few years are actually planned out or just being drip-fed year by year. Another argument that often comes up is that Nintendo is in a position of comfort, "swimming in money," and therefore doesn't need to worry about hype cycles, communication, or public perception. But financial success doesn't invalidate criticism. If anything, it raises expectations.
At this point, the question isn't whether Nintendo can afford to stay quiet, it's whether this continued secrecy is actually beneficial for the Switch 2 ecosystem in the long run. Wouldn't it make more sense to show what's coming, set expectations, and give players confidence in the platform's future instead of keeping everything hidden until the last minute?
Curious to hear what everyone thinks.
Edit: Pokopiia, Tomodachi Life and Rhythm Heaven are also coming.
- Animal Crossing: New Horizons – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition (Jan 15, 2026)
- Mario Tennis Fever (Feb 12, 2026)
- Fire Emblem: Fortune's Weave (2026)
- Splatoon Raiders (TBA)
- Super Mario Bros. Wonder – Nintendo Switch 2 Edition + Meetup in Bellabel Park (2026)
- Yoshi and the Mysterious Book (2026)
A part of this lineup is made up of re-releases or enhanced versions. That's fine as supporting content, but even if you count Splatoon as a system seller, which it arguably is for a large portion of Nintendo's audience, where is the big, forward-looking hit that generates long-term hype for 2026 and beyond? There's still no clear flagship reveal on the horizon, no major new IP, and no ambitious sequel that signals what the platform's future really looks like.
What makes this feel worse is the contrast with what we just saw at the Video Game Awards. Other publishers weren't shy about revealing games planned not only for 2026, but even further out. Whether those games slip or not is beside the point. Those announcements give players a sense of direction, a roadmap, and confidence that something substantial is being built.
Nintendo's philosophy, on the other hand, still revolves around announcing games at the last possible moment. One of the most common defenses of this strategy is the idea that announcing games early is inherently bad, because some titles end up being revealed five years before launch. But that's an extremely binary and exaggerated way of framing the issue. The alternative to announcing a game five years early isn't to announce everything two months before release and keep the future completely opaque. There is a wide middle ground between those extremes.
Even vague reveals, early teasers, or project confirmations help establish momentum and long-term confidence. Right now, Nintendo's silence doesn't feel disciplined, it feels unnecessarily closed off. Instead of building anticipation, it creates uncertainty and invites speculation about whether the next few years are actually planned out or just being drip-fed year by year. Another argument that often comes up is that Nintendo is in a position of comfort, "swimming in money," and therefore doesn't need to worry about hype cycles, communication, or public perception. But financial success doesn't invalidate criticism. If anything, it raises expectations.
At this point, the question isn't whether Nintendo can afford to stay quiet, it's whether this continued secrecy is actually beneficial for the Switch 2 ecosystem in the long run. Wouldn't it make more sense to show what's coming, set expectations, and give players confidence in the platform's future instead of keeping everything hidden until the last minute?
Curious to hear what everyone thinks.
Edit: Pokopiia, Tomodachi Life and Rhythm Heaven are also coming.
Last edited: