The Pokémon Company revealed Pokémon Winds and Waves, the tenth generation of mainline games, during its 30th anniversary presentation on February 27, 2026. These Switch 2 exclusives are set for a 2027 release and feature an open-world archipelago with improved graphics and underwater exploration. The announcement introduced three new starter Pokémon and garnered positive fan reactions for the visual upgrades.
The Pokémon Presents livestream on Pokémon Day unveiled Pokémon Winds and Waves as the next entries in the RPG series, developed by Game Freak for the Nintendo Switch 2. Set in a tropical archipelago inspired by Southeast Asia, the games emphasize exploration across windswept islands, vast oceans, and diverse ecosystems including beaches, volcanoes, and jungles. Players will team up with Pokémon to overcome environmental challenges, with a focus on underwater mechanics allowing encounters with wild water Pokémon.
The trailer showcased returning Pokémon such as Pikachu, Gloom, Tropius, Wailmer, Wailord, and others from previous generations, alongside the new starters: Browt, a Grass-type Bean Chick Pokémon (height 0.3 m, weight 3.5 kg, ability Overgrow); Pombon, a Fire-type Puppy Pokémon inspired by a Pomeranian (height 0.4 m, weight 6.7 kg, ability Blaze); and Gecqua, a Water-type Water Gecko Pokémon (height 0.3 m, weight 4.3 kg, ability Torrent). Two dressed-up Pikachu variants, Mr. Windychu and Ms. Wavychu, appeared in the opening cinematic, hinting at customization options.
Fans praised the graphical improvements over Pokémon Scarlet and Violet (2022), noting dynamic lighting, better water physics, and textured environments. 'They've done it. After 10 years, they've managed to make a full 3D game that's not painful to look at,' wrote Reddit user SpaceShipRat. Pombon emerged as a favorite, with reactions like 'I would die for it' from TJ Denzer. The exclusive Switch 2 status drew mixed responses, as it skips the original Switch's 150 million users but enables modern visuals.
This marks a two-year gap from Legends: Z-A (2025), allowing more development time amid past criticisms of technical performance.