5 Things We Want to See

5 Things We Want to See

Lifestyle

Well, it’s finally time. After years of speculation around what it could look like, this week Nintendo officially revealed the successor to its most popular home console ever: the Nintendo Switch 2.

The new device looks a lot like the old one, retaining the same hybrid handheld and TV-docked system design that made its predecessor a mainstream hit. Although most of the details around the hardware’s technology are currently unknown, the Japanese gaming titan will likely unveil all the inner workings during its Nintendo Direct livestream scheduled for April 2.

Through multiple leaks, many of which now look to have been on the money, rumors around the Switch 2’s capabilities have been circulating for a while now. Could it be as powerful as a PlayStation 4 Pro? Will it retain or improve upon the motion and gyroscopic controls of the OG Switch? Can its detachable Joy-Con controllers be used like a PC mouse for first-person shooter gaming? For now, the best available answer is a simple “maybe.”

But when it comes to Nintendo, it always comes down to the games. Regardless of whether the Switch 2 has any revolutionary gimmicks like the last one, or even the Wii, there’s an inherent trust that a new generation of Nintendo hardware will bring with it some of the best-designed titles of the era.

And the launch window is a crucial part of Nintendo’s strategy. Many of the games that were released on day one alongside new consoles would end up being some of their greatest overall. Games like Super Mario 64 (1996), Wii Sports (2006), and The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild (2017) both introduced audiences to the potential for their systems and set the pace for the others to follow in the years that followed.

Currently, no one knows what’s in store for the initial wave of game announcements. The reveal video featured a quick glimpse of what appears to be a new Mario Kart game — which internet sleuths have already dissected to determine that the latest entry might finally deliver 24-person races alongside some major character redesigns. If it is a genuinely fresh installment, it’d be the first new iteration of the series since 2014’s Mario Kart 8, which saw an updated Deluxe version for the Switch in 2017.

Alongside the mysterious Mario Kart game, only a handful of titles are known to be in development. The biggest of which is Metroid Prime 4: Beyond, a game originally announced back in 2017 before being completely scrapped and restarted in 2019 under Retro Studios, the team behind the original Metroid Prime trilogy. But after so many years existing only as vaporware, it’s hard to say whether the elusive title will be ready for the console’s launch (or at this point, ever).

That being said, there’s many different directions that Nintendo could take with producing the content lineup for the Switch 2. From rectifying past mistakes to reinventing the wheel once more, here are five things we want to see come to Nintendo’s next-gen platform.

Read original source here.

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