Illustration contrasting Nintendo Switch 2's weak Western holiday sales due to economy and pricing with strong performance in Japan.
Illustration contrasting Nintendo Switch 2's weak Western holiday sales due to economy and pricing with strong performance in Japan.
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Nintendo employee attributes Switch 2 holiday slowdown to economy, pricing, and game lineup

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Updating earlier reports on the Nintendo Switch 2's weaker 2025 holiday sales in Western markets compared to the original Switch, a senior Nintendo employee highlighted a 'complicated economic landscape,' higher prices, and lack of a major Western title as factors. New details reveal resilience in Japan thanks to a cheaper local version and strong holiday game sales, amid a promising 2026 lineup.

Building on initial coverage of the Switch 2's holiday sales dip—such as 35% declines in the US (worst console month since 1995 per Circana), 16% in the UK (still up 6% full-year and Nintendo's top European market), over 30% in France, and slowdowns across Europe—the console showed relative strength in Japan.

There, 1.32 million units sold in the last nine weeks of 2025, down just 5.5% from the original Switch but with first-year sales up 11%. A Japan-exclusive version priced around $335 dodged international pricing pressures, while Kirby Air Riders sold over 420,000 copies.

A senior Nintendo employee explained the broader declines: 'complicated economic landscape,' higher price points, and 'the absence of a major Western game'—unlike Super Mario Odyssey's boost for the original in 2017. Switch 2 holiday titles included Metroid Prime 4: Beyond (mixed reviews) and the Japan-popular Kirby game.

The employee expressed pride in the console's over 10 million units in four months despite industry headwinds like tariffs and shortages.

The 2026 pipeline offers momentum: Pokémon Pokopia (March 5), Mario Tennis Fever, updates to Animal Crossing: New Horizons and Super Mario Wonder, and The Super Mario Galaxy movie (April).

What people are saying

Discussions on X highlight Nintendo attributing weaker Switch 2 holiday sales in Western markets to a complicated economy, higher prices, and absence of major Western titles, contrasting with strong sales in Japan due to local pricing and availability. Journalists share reports neutrally, while some users express skepticism toward 'flop' claims and optimism for 2026 lineup.

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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.

Nintendo is reducing production of its Switch 2 console by a third this quarter, from six million to four million units, following disappointing holiday sales in the United States. The move comes despite a strong launch, with sales now lagging behind expectations amid a thin software lineup. Shares in the company fell 6.3 percent in Tokyo after the news broke.

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Nintendo announced its financial results for the period ending March 31, 2026, revealing strong initial sales for the Switch 2. The console has sold 19.86 million units worldwide since its launch last June, along with 48.71 million software units. Despite the success, the company has reduced its sales outlook for the next year.

Nintendo announced a new bundle for the Switch 2 console on May 12. The deal allows buyers to purchase the system along with one game for a total of $500. The offer applies until the console price rises in September.

Reported by AI

In response to backlash following its March 25 announcement, Nintendo told IGN that US prices for physical first-party Switch 2 games remain unchanged at $69.99, while digital versions will be cheaper at $59.99—starting with Yoshi and the Mysterious Book on May 21. The policy reflects production costs and is not retroactive.

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