The March 5, 2026, release of Pokémon Pokopia—a Minecraft-like RPG for Nintendo Switch 2—has ignited a sharp recovery in Nintendo's shares, with a 9% intraday rise on March 11 amid sell-outs worldwide, a Metacritic score of 89, and praise as a system seller following earlier console sales concerns.
Pokémon Pokopia, developed by Game Freak and Koei Tecmo's Omega Force, is set in a post-apocalyptic Kanto region where players repair a broken world, build communities, and simulate daily life. Drawing from Animal Crossing, Stardew Valley, Viva Piñata, and Dragon Quest Builders 2, it guides a human-like character in village rejuvenation efforts, bridging core gamers and casual audiences, per Jefferies analyst Atul Goyal.
Launched exclusively for the Switch 2 (which debuted in June 2025 with record hardware sales), the game quickly sold out at retailers globally, prompting Amazon price hikes. It earned critical acclaim with a Metacritic score of 89—the highest for the Pokémon franchise since 1996—and became a viral hit. Social media buzz included US influencer Ashley Duncan's X post: "If you're looking for a mental break from the world def get Pokopia, it's like therapy." Pokémon Daily Post (90 million followers) quipped: "For Covid we had Animal Crossing. For WW3 we have Pokopia."
Nintendo's shares, down over 40% from ¥14,105 ($89.09) on November 6, 2025, to ¥8,350 ($52.74) by February 13, 2026, amid Switch 2 Western sales slowdowns, rebounded sharply. They hit ¥9,120 ($57.60) post-launch weekend, rose 9% mid-morning March 11 to ¥10,075 ($63.65), and closed at ¥9,932 ($62.74)—a 10.4% gain. Goyal called the console's momentum "surging," crediting Pokopia as a key title easing launch lineup worries.
Shares remain below August 2025's ¥14,795 ($93.41) peak, with challenges like potential memory shortages looming. The game underscores successful external Pokémon development, unlike mixed past efforts (e.g., ILCA's 2021 remakes), joining titles like Chunsoft's Mystery Dungeon, Koei Tecmo's Conquest, DeNA's TCG Pocket, and Niantic's Pokémon Go. The boost coincided with the final trailer for a Super Mario movie sequel. Nintendo eyes 2026 releases like Fire Emblem: Fortune's Weave, plus new 3D Mario and Zelda for the latter's 40th anniversary.