
Nintendo's Switch 2: Nostalgia is the driving force as gaming fans await heavily hyped console
Along a pristine sandy shore, a woman casts her fishing rod out into the sea and waits. She's dressed in a stripy swimsuit with cute red boots and star-shaped sunglasses. For her, every day is beach day.
She is, of course, a character in Animal Crossing: New Horizons, the second most popular video game – with 48 million copies sold – for the
Nintendo
Switch. (Mario Kart 8 is first.)
Animal Crossing has little in the way of a linear story. Players are entertained by endless low-stakes side quests such as fishing, farming, fossil hunting and helping out friends on the island – all to the tune of calm guitar, e-piano and drums.
Above our fashionable angler, a neatly tied present floats inland on a parachute, ready to be knocked out of the sky with a slingshot. A fossil peaks out from a tuft of grass nearby. Butterflies socialise in the morning light. And the island's anthropomorphic inhabitants are chattering away in a high-pitched gibberish.
READ MORE
There are no threats here. Even the home-extension loans are interest-free.
[
Can Nintendo's Switch 2 re-energise a stagnant gaming industry?
Opens in new window
]
In a recent episode of
Kit & Krysta
, a gaming podcast hosted by two former Nintendo employees, Krysta Yang said the game 'saved our lives'.
It's a common sentiment: Animal Crossing was the
breakout video game
of the Covid pandemic, reaching women, men, casual players and hardcore gamers in equal measure.
Released in March 2020, just in time to provide a much-needed antidote to the lockdown anxiety many were feeling, it cradled players when they needed it most and spawned an online community when corporeal ones were taken away.
Its impact shows the difference between a good game and a great game – something Nintendo has achieved time and again. (At one point in the late 2000s, almost every livingroom seemed to have Wii Sports or Mario Kart on the television.)
With the much-hyped release of Nintendo's Switch 2 next week, gamers are nostalgic for its predecessor, now the highest-selling games console of the last 20 years.
'Nobody really saw it coming,' says Stuart Dempsey, chief executive of
GamerFest
, Ireland's biggest gaming event. Following highs in the 2000s with the Nintendo DS and Wii, the Japanese games company appeared to lose its edge with the release, in 2012, of the Wii-U, a commercial and critical flop. 'So to rebound like that,' Dempsey says of the release of Nintendo Switch in 2017, 'was absolutely incredible.'
Stuart Dempsey, chief executive of GamerFest, at the convention in the RDS last weekend. Photograph: Conor Capplis
When The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild – then the latest in a long-running adventure series – was released alongside the Switch, it was immediately clear fans had their hands on something special. At the Game Awards in 2017, the
jubilation on the faces of its creators
when Zelda won game of the year was not only a heartwarming moment, but it also heralded the beginning of an era when Nintendo was back on top.
I'm speaking to Dempsey just outside the RDS in Dublin, where thousands of attendees are wading into the main hall dressed in handmade costumes, videogame-themed hoodies and all manner of merchandise.
The Switch 'was the first time a console had ever felt that portable to me. They'd tried it a few times, but that was when the magic happened'
—
Digital artist Katie O'Kane
The event features virtual-reality demonstrations, game developers testing their latest projects on willing guinea pigs, and traders selling artwork, figurines and second-hand games. The legacy of Nintendo properties is pervasive here, almost every stall including some reference to Pokémon, Mario or Zelda.
'The Switch was a gamechanger,' says Dempsey. 'It [is] such an innovative console. They're not reinventing the wheel this time, but nonetheless I would expect it to do very, very well.'
DFC Intelligence videogame industry projections. Graph: DFC Intelligence
The Switch gives players the option to play games through their television or use it as a hand-held console – though, importantly, the system gives users more processing power in their pockets than ever before.
'Covid was actually a massive catalyst' for online gaming, says Dempsey. 'Because you had young people stuck at home with no opportunity to hang out together, gaming online became a really important outlet for them to keep in touch and socialise.'
Nearby, we see this community out in the open. Some excitable teenagers in military khakis and Spider-Man masks hold up airsoft guns in a sort of Mexican standoff – a reference, no doubt, to a
classic Spider-Man meme
. We should give them some space, I suggest. Their weapons 'all get checked at the door', Dempsey says reassuringly.
[
Sales of Nintendo Switch top 100m, surpassing Wii's lifetime figure
Opens in new window
]
It's nostalgia that comes up again and again when speaking to fans about what made the Switch and its games so special. And though the Switch 2 will come with a bigger screen, more storage and better performance, its biggest titles will feature the same old titans that have fronted Nintendo for years.
Some cosplayers catch my eye. Devlyn Marcos and Matthew O'Donoghue are dressed as two such titans, Mario and Luigi. O'Donoghue, being the taller of the pair, is aptly dressed as Luigi. He has pre-ordered Switch 2; he says he's most excited about being able to play his favourite childhood games, from Nintendo's GameCube era in the early 2000s.
Devlyn Marcos and Matthew O'Donoghue cosplaying as Mario and Luigi at GamerFest 2025. Photograph: Conor Capplis
'It's a nostalgia thing for me too,' says
Amy Quinn, a long-time Nintendo fan
who owns the video-game reseller
Retro Ralph Gaming
. 'It's the stuff I grew up with really. I'm going back to the same characters with new stories. The old classic games like Mario, they keep you entertained for hours on end. The new ones on the PlayStation 5, for example, you play them once or twice and it's not the same.'
Helen and Amy Quinn at Amy's stall at GamerFest 2025. Photograph: Conor Capplis
She's holding off on pre-ordering the new console, hoping it will come down in price over time. (Nintendo Ireland has priced the Switch 2 at €469.99 – that's without any games – at the time of writing.) In front of Quinn are stacks of video games, with not a Switch box in sight. They still sell very well, she says.
Katie O'Kane is selling her artwork at a nearby stall. The digital artist has pieces inspired by a range of Nintendo video games, including The Legend of Zelda. Tears of the Kingdom, the latest game in the series, is her favourite. 'There's so much to it,' she says. 'You can pick it up and get lost for a few hours.'
Digital artist Katie O'Kane selling her artwork at GamerFest 2025. Photograph: Conor Capplis
'Nintendo has always been about taking games wherever you go, in your pocket,' she says. The Switch 'was the first time a console had ever felt that portable to me. They'd tried it a few times, but that was when the magic happened.'
Travis Mack, owner of
Retromania
, Ireland's largest reseller of retro Nintendo portable consoles and games, says that while other game companies chase the teenage or adult markets, Nintendo make games for all ages and genders. 'They didn't exclude anybody,' he says. 'They tried to push their console on everybody, and it worked. It literally is the biggest impact of a console in the last 20 years.'
Travis Mack, owner of videogamer store Retromania, at GamerFest 2025 in the RDS. Photograph: Conor Capplis
Mack says the backwards compatibility of the new console, which means users can play their old games on the new system, has been such an appealing feature that the usual trading in of old titles in advance of a new console launch isn't happening – to his apparent frustration. Gamers are, however, selling their old console to afford the new one, he says.
Mack will travel to Wexford next week for a midnight launch of the Switch 2 at the
Retro Gaming Store
, where he will get together with some friends and play Mario Kart World, Nintendo's flagship title for its new console.
The Switch 2 comes at a critical time for the
stagnant gaming industry
. As Nintendo projects a growing confidence in its supply chain, overcoming fears that US tariff chaos would hinder its rollout, the gaming-market analyst DFC Intelligence recently increased its year-one sales estimates for the Switch 2 from 15 million units to 16 million. It expects 100 million units to be sold globally by the end of the decade.
Mario Kart World on the new Nintendo Switch 2: 'The only downside to the first Switch was that it was underpowered. The new Switch, though, is taking care of all of that,' says Travis Mack of Retromania. Photograph: Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP/Getty
'The Nintendo Switch 2 is arguably the most important product launch in video game history,' DFC
said
earlier this month, adding that it expects it to be the fastest-selling console system ever.
Since
Grand Theft Auto VI
– widely considered the most anticipated video game of all time – was delayed from its 2025 release date to May 2026, much more is at stake for the industry this year than Nintendo's bottom line. DFC says the Switch 2 'has the potential to lift a video game industry that has been grappling with product delays, rising costs and economic uncertainty'.
If the industry finds itself in the doldrums today, DFC expects sails to be raised high in the coming years and for hardware and software sales records to be broken. All eyes are on the Switch 2.
'It's bringing a bit of Japan to the rest of the world,' Mack says. 'Japan have been the masters of portable gaming. On trains, people are playing games. On planes, people are playing games. They're bringing their culture over to us and are embroidering the whole family unit.
'The only downside to the first Switch was that it was underpowered. The new Switch, though, is taking care of all of that.'
Nintendo Switch 2 is available in Ireland from Thursday, June 5th
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Irish Sun
9 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
I've played new Nintendo Switch 2 for HOURS – I'm obsessed with latest Mario Kart mode but console tweak is even better
I'VE now spent hours playing the new Nintendo Switch 2 – and it's hard to imagine not buying one. The new Nintendo console won't come out until June 5, but I was invited to a special extended preview session to put the machine through its paces. Advertisement 11 The Sun's tech editor Sean Keach had a go on the new machine Credit: Sean Keach / The Sun 11 He spent hours transfixed by Mario Kart World, Nintendo's launch title for the Switch 2 Credit: Sean Keach / The Sun 11 The new Nintendo Switch 2 is out on June 5, 2025 Credit: Nintendo I had a full day with Mario Kart World, the blockbuster game for this next-gen Nintendo gaming gadget. And I've got three main takeaways to share. THE MACHINE My first thought was: this really is a beautiful machine. It takes all of the best bits of Nintendo's half-handheld, half-plug-into-your-telly Advertisement Read more on console gaming The first thing you notice is the size of the screen. It has a giant 7.9-inch And it serves up Full HD 1080p resolution at 120Hz, which is gaming gold for a handheld. Ultra HD is arguably overkill at this screen size, especially when you factor in battery life pressure. Of course you'll be able to get up to 4K resolution when it's plugged in. Advertisement Most read in Gaming The machine has upgraded Nvidia graphical processing, 12GB of memory versus the old 4GB, and a whopping 256GB of storage that eclipses the original Switch's 32GB. This might be the best upgrade of the lot. You can cram loads of games onto the console now, which is perfect for a portable device. And the Joy-Con controllers that now magnetically snap to the console feel more premium too. Everything we know so far about the Nintendo Switch 2 Oh, and you can flip one Joy-Con on its side to use it like a computer mouse. Clever. It works really well. THE GAME On to Mario Kart, which is pure unadulterated kart-racing fun. Advertisement This is the Mario Kart you know and love, but it's more beautiful than ever. The iconic cartoonish art style has been retained, but it's more pixel-dense and detailed than ever. 11 There are new Joy-Con controllers that magnetically attach to the console Credit: Sean Keach / The Sun 11 A new 'free roam' mode lets you explore the vast world of Mario Kart – including iconic courses Credit: Sean Keach / The Sun Advertisement It brings the tracks to life like never before. That's important, because Mario Kart World makes the game's universe come alive in a way we've never seen. This title has a special 'free roam' mode that lets you move between courses. So you can travel a giant Mario Kart World to see what all the 'in between' stuff looks like. Advertisement NINTENDO SWITCH 2 – THE OFFICIAL SPECS Here's the official list... Screen: Capacitive touch screen 7.9-inch wide color gamut LCD screen 1920x1080 pixels HDR10 support VRR up to 120 Hz Storage: 256GB CPU/GPU: Custom Nvidia processor Size: 4.5 x 10.7 x 0.55 inches Weight: 1.18lbs with Joy-Con 2 controllers attached Video output: Output via HDMI connector in TV mode Maximum of 3840x2160 (4K) resolution at 60 fps (TV mode) Supports 120 fps when 1920x1080/2560x1440 resolutions are selected Supports HDR10 *Maximum 1920x1080 resolution in tabletop mode and handheld mode, following screen resolution. Speakers: Stereo Microphone: Built-in microphone with noise- and echo-cancellation Connectors: 2x USB-C Audio Jack: 3.5mm Game Card Slot: Supports both Nintendo Switch 2 and Nintendo Switch game careds Storage Expansion: microSD Express cards up to 2TB Battery Life: 2 to 6.5 hours Charging Time: 3 hours Picture Credit: Nintendo There are fun quests and mini-games to complete in this vast open world. And the open world is multiplayer-friendly too, so you can roll around with pals wherever you like. The other change that struck me was the addition of a Forza-style rewind function that lets you undo a mistake. It won't drag everyone else back in time though: they'll keep racing. Advertisement 11 The Nintendo Switch 2 plugs into your telly – but also works as a handheld console Credit: Sean Keach / The Sun 11 Classic Nintendo characters return for the new Mario Kart title Credit: Nintendo So use it with caution: it's for getting out of a tricky spot, but it won't help you cheat. THE QUESTIONS My third takeaway, after hours of play, is: I still have questions! Advertisement Firstly, I haven't been able to test the machine's battery life, so I have no idea if it achieves the promises six-plus hours promised by Nintendo. Secondly, is it worth the money ? I'm inclined to say yes, but it's too soon to tell. 11 Mario Kart World adds a rewind function to undo your dodgy driving mistakes Credit: Sean Keach / The Sun 11 This map shows you what the full extent of Mario Kart World looks like Credit: Nintendo Advertisement Ultimately, some Mario Kart fans will want to put down all of the money for the console, the game, and nothing else. It's a global sensation, and delivers fun for the whole family – plus guests too. And chuck in The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, and you can easily lose hundreds of hours into this game. So it's starts to make the £395 price tag (or £429 with Mario Kart World bundled in) feel very compelling. Ultimately, Nintendo is a master of game design, and has created some of the best-loved machines and titles in console history . Advertisement 11 Mario Kart is as addictive as ever – but it now looks even better Credit: Sean Keach / The Sun 11 The first Nintendo Switch 2 bundle comes with Mario Kart World included Credit: Nintendo And at this stage, it doesn't seem like the Nintendo Switch 2 will ruin that track record. Time to check my piggy bank. Advertisement This is The Sun's Nintendo Switch 2 extended gameplay preview. Check back at The Sun for a full scored Nintendo Switch 2 review in the coming days.


Irish Times
14 hours ago
- Irish Times
Manchester United's debacle in Asia boosts case against postseason tours
As the dust settles on Manchester United 's postseason tour of Malaysia and Hong Kong, the question must be asked: was it worth it? United may have pocketed around £10m from their six-day, two-match visit to Asia but what they lost was arguably worse. And no, we're not just talking about their 1-0 defeat against the 'Asean All Stars' in Kuala Lumpur, a scratch, invitational side that had never previously played together. Omar Berrada, United's chief executive, had excitedly hailed the tour as an 'opportunity for us to collaborate with our valued commercial partners, and to deepen relationships with our fans'. That vision probably didn't include Amad Diallo sticking his middle finger up at supporters, a gesture for which he refused to apologise, the winger insisting he did it in response to insults about his mother. Nor did it allow for Alejandro Garnacho sulking and yawning through his various off-pitch duties. It remains to be seen how many key performance indicators were met by the Argentinian, who finished the tour by posting a one-word caption on the runway as United departed home to Europe: 'finally'. At least Matthijs De Ligt, Joshua Zirkzee, Ayden Heaven and Patrick Dorgu put on a brave face, smiling and waving through the sparsely-attended open-top bus tour of Kuala Lumpur, as an accompanying PA system blared out 'Glory, Glory, Man United'. Hours later, United lost their first match of the tour, against the All Stars. Ruben Amorim did little to spin the defeat into anything positive. 'The boos from the fans, maybe it is something we need because every game that we lost in the Premier League they were always there,' the Portuguese manager said. 'We don't have it in us not to choke in every exercise, in every game – that is what happened. We should win these kind of games, no matter what.' READ MORE United went 1-0 behind against Hong Kong on Friday but rallied to win the second match of the tour 3-1. After a disastrous season in which United finished just above the relegation zone, this was meant to be a moneymaking charm offensive – the club promising 'a summer like no other' – but the tour seems to have done more harm than good. It ended up as another opportunity for defeat and derision, enforcing the idea that United are a spent force, and widening the gap between the team and their supporters. There were thousands of unsold tickets, while fans hoping to watch the first game in Kuala Lumpur on the club's YouTube channel were treated to extensive build-up and the first 35 seconds of the match before being redirected to a pay-per-view MUTV broadcast. Amid all the selfies and handshakes and suggestions of 'glory', there is a sordid and calculated underbelly here. Yes, money was made, but is £10m worth it to a team that is about to spent £62.5m on a new forward? The disastrous nature of United's jaunt to Asia brings into question the viability of postseason tours in general. In a world where elite clubs are all too vocal in complaining about fixture congestion and injuries, these tours add mental and physical fatigue to already exhausted bodies, not to mention needless air miles with adverse environmental impact. United's players left for Malaysia on May 25th, just hours after their final Premier League game of the season, against Aston Villa. Having landed on Saturday, most of the senior squad will now report for international duty before World Cup qualifiers this weekend. United's senior players will not have any meaningful break until mid-June and are expected back for preseason in early July, before the club's preseason tour to Sweden and the US. Manchester United's Alejandro Garnacho during the exhibition game against Hong Kong. Photograph: Peter Parks/AFP via Getty Images United are not alone in these missteps. Tottenham and Newcastle embarked on postseason tours to Australia this time last year and played each other in Melbourne on May 22nd, 2024, three days after the final day of the 2023/24 season. Kieran Trippier, who captained Newcastle in that Melbourne fixture, admitted the trip was 'not ideal' before his commitments with England at Euro 2024, a tournament in which the right-back struggled for fitness. Injuries and fatigue plagued Tottenham's start to the season, too. And if Spurs' postseason tour wasn't directly responsible for that it certainly didn't help, while Daniel Levy's comments at a Tottenham fans' forum in September that he 'would like to see less games, but higher-quality games' were subsequently difficult to stomach. It is difficult to determine exactly how big the environmental impact is for these tours. The preseason before Jim Ratcliffe bought a stake in Manchester United, the club offset 450 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions to cover the necessary air travel by players and staff to the US. Perhaps unsurprisingly for a club that is now part-owned by a company with interests in everything from petrochemicals to mass plastic production, there has been no mention of offsetting emissions for the trip to Malaysia and Hong Kong, which included 14,000 air miles for the team alone. The Professional Footballers' Association's sustainability champion, David Wheeler, has spoken of the harm caused by such tours. 'It's not only irresponsible from a climate point of view, but from a player care point of view, physically and mentally,' Wheeler said. 'They are human beings. They get paid very well, as we know, but they have a limit to what their bodies can take and how they cope with it from a mental health point of view'. The organisation's chief executive, Maheta Molango, has also 'expressed concern about these postseason tours'. Despite the arguments to the contrary, postseason tours look here to stay, part of a new footballing landscape almost nobody asked for. And there will be plenty of other clubs that plead poverty and set sail for distant lands in the future. For now, we have to find something else to watch before the start of the Club World Cup in a couple of weeks' time – a month-long tournament absurdly relaunched by Fifa, with a $1bn (£775m) prize pot. Manchester United must wish they had an invite. – Guardian


Irish Times
a day ago
- Irish Times
China accuses US of violating trade deal, vows firm response
China accused the US of violating their recent trade deal and vowed to take measures to defend its interests, dimming the prospect of an immediate leadership call that Donald Trump wants to have to further bilateral talks. The Chinese Ministry of Commerce issued a statement rebuking the US president's claim that Beijing breached the consensus reached in Geneva last month. The dust-up threatened to upend trade relations even as Trump expressed hope on Friday he will speak with Chinese President Xi Jinping, with White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett expecting a call to take place this week. Beijing accused the US of unilaterally introducing new discriminatory restrictions, including new guidelines on AI chip export controls, curbs on chip design software sales to China and the revocation of Chinese student visas. 'If the US insists on its own way and continues to damage China's interests, China will continue to take resolute and forceful measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests,' the ministry said. It also said the US violated the consensus reached between Trump and Xi on January 17, when they last spoke, without elaborating. READ MORE Asian shares dropped along with US stock-index futures, with a gauge of Chinese stocks traded in Hong Kong falling as much as 2.9%, the most in nearly two months. Tensions between the world's largest economies are ratcheting up again after the tariff thaw in May. The Trump administration last week said it planned to start revoking visas for Chinese students while moving to restrict the sale of chip design software to China. They have also barred the export of critical US jet engine parts and technology to China, the New York Times reported. Beyond strains in economic ties, geopolitical friction is also growing. China's Foreign Ministry over the weekend protested US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's assertion at a gathering of military chiefs that China poses an imminent threat to Taiwan, a self-ruled island claimed by Beijing. Trump didn't elaborate when he accused Beijing of violating the tariff truce on Friday, but US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer complained that China had not sped exports of critical minerals needed for cutting-edge electronics. China has been loosening the grip on its exports of rare earths over the past week at a pace that's 'slower than industry would like,' said Michael Hart, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in China. In the statement, the Commerce Ministry said it 'resolutely rejects' the US accusations and that the country has strictly and sincerely implemented the consensus. Trump's comments came a day after US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said talks with China on trade had stalled and suggested that a call between Trump and Xi might be necessary to break the deadlock. The US president 'is going to have a wonderful conversation about the trade negotiations this week with President Xi,' Hassett, director of the White House National Economic Council, said on Sunday on ABC News. 'That's our expectation.' Trump has signaled a wish to have a call with his Chinese counterpart as early as February and later said he was willing to travel to the Asian nation to meet with Xi, although no such engagement has been scheduled so far. --Bloomberg