Nintendo’s latest Partner Showcase zeroed in on third-party firepower, sketching out a busy release pipeline for Switch 2 while keeping the original Switch very much alive. The presentation packed new IP, surprise revivals, big-budget ports, and a handful of demos and shadow drops that signal a confident handoff between generations.
Strategically, it’s a smart balance. With the Switch family surpassing 140 million lifetime units according to Nintendo’s financial reports, publishers are positioning tentpoles on Switch 2 without abandoning a massive audience on Switch. The result is a slate that spans prestige RPGs, survival crafting, sports, horror, and retro preservation—all in one show.

Key highlights from the Nintendo Switch 2 showcase lineup
Orbitals opened the show with style: a retro anime-inspired co-op adventure built for couch sessions. Its two-player design leans into expressive character animation and synchronized abilities, the kind of spectacle that tends to pop on Nintendo hardware when gameplay and art direction row in the same direction.
Tokyo Scramble put a clever spin on survival horror. Rather than empowering players with heavy weapons, it forces escape, improvisation, and trap-setting against subterranean dinosaurs. A standout twist lets up to four people co-pilot one character—one handles movement, another traps, and so on—an inventive party mode that feels tailor-made for local play.
Big-name ports anchored the showcase. Final Fantasy VII Rebirth is heading to Switch 2, widening the audience for one of the most acclaimed action-RPGs in recent memory. Bethesda’s trio—Fallout 4 Anniversary Edition, Indiana Jones and the Great Circle from MachineGames, and The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered—underscores third-party confidence in the platform’s horsepower.
Valheim, the viral Viking survival hit, is sailing to Switch 2 with the robust feature set that grew out of its Early Access era, including 10-player online play. Meanwhile, Granblue Fantasy Relink brings kinetic, party-based action and a deep roster of distinct heroes; its smooth onboarding and high skill ceiling make it a strong fit for portable-grind sessions.
Turok Origins resurrects a dormant dinosaur-shooter icon with both first- and third-person perspectives and co-op, promising a modernized pace without losing pulp charm. Capcom’s sci-fi shooter Pragmata resurfaced with a new look and a playable demo rolling out on the eShop, spotlighting its centerpiece hacking mechanic that reshapes combat arenas in real time.
New and returning game series across both systems
For sports fans, the Direct split the field. Captain Tsubasa 2 World Fighters doubles down on over-the-top anime football with more than 100 playable characters and theatrical special moves, while eFootball Kick-Off! picks up the simulation mantle as the successor to Pro Evolution Soccer, complete with licensed clubs and players for purists.
Action-RPG depth was a throughline. Kyoto Xanadu blends side-scrolling exploration, 3D combat, and school-life sim arcs—vibes that should resonate with fans of Falcom-style character bonding and dungeon runs. Digimon Story Time Stranger keeps Bandai Namco’s RPG lineage humming, promising a rich creature-collection loop layered over character-driven storytelling.

Nostalgia had teeth. A Bomberman collection landed on both systems, bundling multiple 8- and 16-bit entries, including first-time English releases. The long-running Arcade Archives series expands with additional classics, while the new Console Archives line debuts with retro staples such as Ninja Gaiden II, preserving tight, high-skill action design for modern players.
Hollow Knight receives a Switch 2 edition with enhanced visuals, and existing owners on Switch get a free upgrade—a consumer-friendly move that should be the standard for cross-generation libraries. Monster Hunter Stories returned with a demo on the eShop, showing off its cartoon stylings, snappy turn-based combat, and surprisingly nuanced monster-bonding systems.
Square Enix’s visual novel sequel PARANORMASIGHT: The Mermaid’s Curse is targeting Switch 1, building on the cult success of its predecessor with another web of urban legends and occult twists that reward meticulous note-taking and multiple playthroughs.
What you can play or try on Switch today and soon
The show didn’t skimp on hands-on opportunities. The Bomberman collection is available immediately. Demos are live or rolling out for Pragmata, Monster Hunter Stories, and The Adventures of Elliot, the latter reaffirming its launch window after a striking debut last year with painterly HD-2D visuals and a time-hopping hook.
That free Switch 2 upgrade for Hollow Knight is another win for players with established libraries. Cross-gen support also extends to titles like Digimon Story Time Stranger and Kyoto Xanadu, ensuring coexisting ecosystems instead of an abrupt platform cliff.
Why this Nintendo Direct matters for Switch players
This was a textbook third-party showcase, but the implications are bigger than a sizzle reel. Fallout, Indiana Jones, Granblue, and Rebirth arriving on Switch 2 indicate publishers see longevity and technical headroom, not just a handheld compromise. When Bethesda and Square Enix commit, the library grows broader, not just bigger.
It also plugs historic gaps. Konami’s archives keep classic design in circulation; eFootball provides a modern sim alternative on a platform where football options have often lagged; and Valheim’s 10-player co-op expands the social sandbox category that thrives on Switch’s pick-up-and-play rhythm.
Market context supports the approach. Circana’s software charts routinely show Nintendo’s first-party titles dominating, but late-cycle momentum often shifts toward third-party variety that sustains engagement. This Direct hit that note: fresh IP to discover, evergreen franchises to revisit, and smart upgrades that respect existing players. In short, a sturdy plan for the months ahead.
