logo
Is ‘Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour' Really Worth $10?

Is ‘Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour' Really Worth $10?

Forbes13 hours ago

In the 1990s, the immortal ad campaign once declared that 'Sega does what Nintendon't'. Fast-forward to 2025, and it's slightly different — Sony did what Nintendidn't by bundling Astro's Playroom with its PS5 to showcase its new tech, while Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour is locked behind a $10 payment.
Still, I bit the bullet and bought it anyway — after all, this is a Nintendo release. There's bound to be plenty of value in there, and surely much more than the minuscule $9.99 fee suggests, yeah?
Well, no, not really. On balance, the pricing is accurate — the effort that went into this package was done with care. Still, it represents one of my biggest regrets as a day-one console owner, as playing Welcome Tour for this review means I've still not started Mario Kart World, which was the sole reason I ordered the damn Switch 2 in the first place.
Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour initially dumps you into a long queue ahead of the experience — think the job center scene in The Full Monty without the thrusting — in which you pick a character from a wide range of generic people. In the absence of 'balding and overweight' options, I opted for the closest resemblance to what I hoped I'd become by my late 30s.
As you ascend the escalator to what can only be described as 'clean Gamescom,' Welcome Tour quickly highlights a lot of strengths for the new console, which would be great if it were, by default, the first thing you'd play on the Switch 2.
First up is the quality of the console's sound — not only can it be loud and crystal clear, but there's also a real depth to the effects, particularly echoes. The 120fps quality is as clear as day, too, bolstered by the bigger screen and fancy, magnetic Joy-Con 2s.
Still, what becomes almost instantly clear is that you can't equate the Switch 2's technical genius with a $10 experience that explains why that's the case, especially one that goes to great lengths to make you feel like you're on a school trip. I'm not going to review the Switch 2, especially not through the lens of Welcome Tour's light propaganda.
You start Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour on the left Joy-Con 2, exploring its wonders. You need to collect all the stamps in your given zone, which pop up for every button or feature of that piece of tech, to move to the next area. Collecting stamps for the up, down, left, and right buttons individually feels like a chore, and they're right next to each other. There's no fanfare or fun animation for any of these — it's very much a case that these inputs exist, and you should be happy they exist.
In the spaces between these gatekeeping stamp plinths, there are fellow visitors to speak to, quizzes to take, minigames to play, and the occasional tech demo to enjoy. On the face of it, Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour knows it could party, but the company's desire to teach you about the console through abnormally dull execution makes you soon realize it might not be money well spent.
There are nice flash points, to its credit. Early in the tour — and rightly so — the mouse controls are showcased in a minigame that proves a fantastic example of progress: this pioneering idea is incredibly responsive, with the added bonus that rare left-handed mouse users like me can accessibly adapt the tech, simply using your preferred Joy-Con 2 as standard. Sure, the analog stick is still a little uncomfortable in the mouse grasp, but it's a small price to pay for progress.
Still, even in light moments like this, there's also a shade, as another mouse game undermines the vibration technology that Welcome Tour tries to promote. To celebrate the Joy-Con 2's magnetic rumble function, you're presented with a two-way axis to detect where the strongest pulses are. For the life of me, I'll never get the double gold medal, because you need near-pinpoint accuracy to get within the margin of error, as it's not that obvious. Sure, I might have bigger hands than your average bear, but I can't recognize the most powerful tremors.
Otherwise, the minigames and tech demos are mostly standard fare. You shake maracas, make coin sounds with the vibration mechanism, shoot balloons, or play finger-Twister. Still, given Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour's focus on completionism, you mostly fly through them, shrug, and carry on, looking for the next thing to strike off your list.
There's also a ton of reading. As someone who thrives in European museums (most recently ticking off the unsurprisingly depressing Museum of Communism in Prague), even I struggled to work my way through the three to five information boards that popped up at every 'quiz' desk before taking a mind-numbing test. Sure, you'll learn about how the mechanics work, and probably learn a few pretty impressive things. Still, you're mostly rewarded with silly multiple-choice questions that even celebrity episodes of The Chase would be embarrassed to use.
FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™
Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase
Pinpoint By Linkedin
Guess The Category
Queens By Linkedin
Crown Each Region
Crossclimb By Linkedin
Unlock A Trivia Ladder
You're even asked to return lost property to the main desk. You can only hold one item of lost property at a time. I assume the idea here was to explain how fast travel works, but it's another tick-box affair that will leave you feeling deflated and annoyed.
Later, too, there are zones that apparently require you to use technology you might not have, such as the Switch 2 Pro Controller or camera. Luckily, they're optional, as Eurogamer's morse code guide outlines, and it's nice (and wholly unsurprising) that Nintendo offers this workaround.
Due to bad decision-making on Nintendo's part, Welcome Tour occupies the weirdest position for a paid 'game.' The only real way you'll appreciate Welcome Tour's content is to know that you have to buy and play it before whatever you've genuinely bought your Switch 2 for, such as presumed killer app Mario Kart World (which I don't know anything about because, like I said, I've still not even started it).
Given the outlay and practicality of the materials — and, let's face it, the obviousness and dullness of the execution — Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour should have been baked into the console. In a perfect world, it would have ditched the crap quizzes, streamlined the minigames and tech demos, and introduced itself as part of the installation and syncing process to get you excited for the games you really want to play.
At the very least, this should've been a freebie for pre-orders to sweeten the deal, especially given all the flak Nintendo has received for the pricing of Mario Kart World (which, if I'm being honest, isn't something I agree with). Hell, bundle it in with Nintendo Switch Online — given the depth of additions going on there, specifically the GameCube expansion, it's a surefire winner, and I'd wager that it would've earned better long-term income for Nintendo.
But for $10, is the Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour worth it? Objectively, yes — a lot of effort has been put into it, and there are five or six hours of play time if you want to complete it fully. Nobody's expecting another Wii Sports, but if you're going to show off all the hard work you've put into your hardware on such a technical level — and with broadly forgettable rewards — the experience should be part and parcel of receiving your Switch 2, especially when you realize, after around an hour, you'd have so much more fun playing Mario Kart World instead.
Not that I can confirm that, of course. I still haven't played Mario Kart World.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Aimee Lou Wood and Patrick Schwarzenegger Reunite for Venmo Commercial
Aimee Lou Wood and Patrick Schwarzenegger Reunite for Venmo Commercial

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Aimee Lou Wood and Patrick Schwarzenegger Reunite for Venmo Commercial

A new Venmo campaign has caught the attention of White Lotus fans everywhere. Titled, "You Can Venmo This, You Can Venmo That," the campaign features Aimee Lou Wood and Patrick Schwarzenegger. In the ad, the two are paying for a range of items — from groceries and records to hats and rideshares. At one point, Schwarzenegger says, "Everybody I know uses Venmo. For splitting costs for dinners, concert tickets and vacations so I had to get Aimee Lou on board to make her life easier... As an entrepreneur I'm really serious about my 'rewards game,' so it's a win I can earn cash back when I pay with the Venmo Debit Card. I love a rewards hack.' Wood then pipes in, "Hanging out with my lovely friend, Patrick, I quickly found out that Venmo is a go-to way for people in the States to send money to friends, but it's so much more than that." She continues, 'As an Aquarius, I tend to be quite clever with money, so I love that you can earn some serious cash back when you spend your balance with the Venmo Debit Card – that means another astrology reading for me!' The commercial is set to the Iconic song, "The Choice Is Yours." According to AdWeek, "Seeley's target audience for the new Venmo campaign is Gen Z and younger millennials, which make up the majority of Venmo's 64 million monthly users, who want more functionality from the payments app..." In 2022, as outlined by the outlet, Venmo partnered with Amazon so that customers could pay for their items with the Venmo app. Since then, it has integrated with other stores and companies like Uber, Instacart, TikTok Shop, and Domino's. And what are the perks? Those who sign up for the Venmo debit card can get 15% cash back this summer for select purchases at stores like Sephora, Walmart, Lyft, McDonald's, and Lou Wood and Patrick Schwarzenegger Reunite for Venmo Commercial first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 5, 2025

Voyageurs National Park faces budget cuts amid 50th birthday revelry
Voyageurs National Park faces budget cuts amid 50th birthday revelry

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Voyageurs National Park faces budget cuts amid 50th birthday revelry

If you've ever spent time planning a milestone birthday party, and then found out you don't have the resources to truly celebrate, you might understand what's happening at Minnesota's lone national park in 2025. Voyageurs National Park, the 218,000-acre expanse of water and wilderness on the Canadian border just east of International Falls, turns 50 this year. And the gala celebration planned by the park's myriad fans has been tempered just a bit by the announcement earlier this year of sweeping budget cuts all across the National Park Service. According to some reports, the budget reductions announced in February by Elon Musk and his controversial Department of Government Efficiency have left as many as 10 park staff positions vacant at Voyageurs. The park opened in 1975 amid fanfare and some controversy, as some long-time property owners in the area were pressured to sell their lake cabins to the NPS. But none of that potential bad news, or a spring cloudburst, could dampen the recent celebration of the park's 50th birthday held at a Minneapolis brewery by the Voyageurs Conservancy – which was founded a decade before the park opened, and works to connect more people to Voyageurs. Hundreds braved a sudden late May rain and turned out for the celebration, which featured information about Voyageurs, food, live music and a silent auction to raise money for the conservancy's efforts. 'Everyone loves a birthday, and we're birthdaying the hell out of the birthday. We're doing it all year long. It's not just one day, it's a full year of activities,' said Christina Hausman Rhode, the conservancy's executive director. 'We've had a couple of bumps in the road with federal changes. We've lost staff and there's some uncertainty there, but through it all this is an important moment to celebrate the park, to be thinking about the future and to be thinking about the vision for the national park in our state.' The park welcomes upwards of 200,000 visitors per year, with a notable uptick during the pandemic, when more people were seeking outdoor recreation. Those numbers put Voyageurs somewhere in the middle, attendance-wise, among the country's 63 national parks, far below the 12 million visitors the Great Smoky Mountains National Park in Tennessee and North Carolina saw in 2024, and well ahead of Gates of the Arctic National Park in Alaska, which saw just over 11,000 visitors last year. Isle Royale National Park, which is in Michigan but located just off the tip of Minnesota's Arrowhead and is accessible only by boat or plane, recorded 28,800 visitors in 2024. Hausman Rhode said that in a state like Minnesota that celebrates the outdoors from the wilderness of the Boundary Waters to the hiking trails of the Driftless area in the southeastern corner of the state, a surprising number of people aren't aware that the state has a national park, and many have never been there. Collectively, the conservancy is working to change that. 'We are another part of that mosaic of wonderful public lands in our state,' she said. 'I think Voyageurs kind of completes that mosaic, as it's everything Minnesotans love. It's the big lakes, it's the boats, it's the loons, it's the wolves. And we put it in a national park, and it's our gift to the rest of the National Park Service.' In addition to opportunities to view wildlife up close and camp in secluded sites specially designed so you don't see neighboring campers, Voyageurs sells itself as a Dark Sky Park, popular for stargazers for the lack of light pollution and the opportunity to see a vast cosmic array and even northern lights on clear nights. While fishing, camping and boating have always been staples for Voyageurs visitors, Hausman Rhode said houseboating and sea kayaking are among the activities seeing a recent spike in popularity at the park. The DOGE cuts have touched off a backlash from coast to coast, with a group called More Perfect Union erecting billboards in Minnesota and Wisconsin noting that the Trump administration's funding reductions could mean reduced staff and increased danger for park visitors in 2025. 'We are down some staff positions and the next proposed federal budget is looking really grim for the National Park Service,' Hausman Rhode said. 'We don't know totally how that will filter down to the National Park Service, but we know cuts are being proposed.' The park has visitors centers at Rainy Lake, Kabetogema Lake and Ash River, all of which can be reached from the Twin Cities in under five hours of driving. The park does not require an entry fee, although there are separate charges for camping, houseboat permits, boat tours and on-site equipment rentals. More information about the Voyageurs Conservancy and their efforts can be found at No Wi-Fi, no problem: 8 family-friendly hike-in lodges for a digital detox Skywatch: June stargazing — the great late show Minnesota veterans with PTSD turn to the outdoors to improve mental health A 700-pound boulder pins Alaska man face-down in a glacier creek for three hours Skywatch: High heavenly hair

Jared Leto accused of ‘sexual impropriety' by multiple women, some who say they were underage
Jared Leto accused of ‘sexual impropriety' by multiple women, some who say they were underage

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Jared Leto accused of ‘sexual impropriety' by multiple women, some who say they were underage

Jared Leto is denying allegations of years-long 'sexual impropriety' brought forth by multiple women, including DJ and music producer Allie Teilz, who recently resurfaced her more than decade-old claims against the actor. In an Air Mail exposé published on Saturday, nine accusers shared their stories of Leto's alleged misconduct with younger women, some who claim they were underage. 'It's been an open secret for a long time,' one anonymous woman told the outlet. Model Laura La Rue said she met Leto in 2008, when she was 16 and he was 36. Despite her being underage, which La Rue claims Leto knew, he asked her for number and things quickly took a sexual turn, she said. She described one incident while she visiting him when she was 17, alleging Leto 'just walked out, d– out, like it was normal.' A representative for Leto denied that allegation, saying their interactions involved 'nothing sexual or inappropriate.' They further claimed that La Rue 'later applied to work as Mr. Leto's personal assistant, further underscoring the absence of anything inappropriate.' Another accuser similarly recalled meeting Leto while underage. She described a time, after she'd turned 18, when they were at Leo's house and he 'suddenly pulled his penis out and started masturbating … grabbed my hand, and put it on him.' The exposé, titled 'The Cult of Leto,' is filled with similar accusations against the 53-year-ol. The women accuse him of preying on cute, young girls, several of whom they say were recruited to attend his parties in the mid-2000s. A representative for the Thirty Seconds to Mars frontman 'expressly denied' all the allegations in the story. The exposé comes less than two months after a viral Instagram story from Teilz, who reupped a 2012 claim that she was 'assaulted and traumatized' by Leto when she was 17. 'He knew my age and didn't care. What he did was predatory, terrifying and unacceptable,' she said. She then received dozens of replies from women who shared their own experiences with the actor — some claiming he was inappropriate with them when they were as young as 14. Teilz reposted those replies, all of which can be read in her Story Highlight. Representatives for Leto did not immediately respond to a Daily News request for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store