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Murmurings of a delayed Nintendo "Switch 2" release schedule appeared online earlier this week—Brazilian games journalist, Pedro Henrique Lutti Lippe, made claims during an "OX do Controle" videocast—based on insider information. Additionally, he broke the bad news on social media: "Nobody wants to hear this, but this one is pretty intense. After consulting five sources from three different continents, all echoing basically the same thing, we can reveal (that) the launch of the Switch's successor should only happen in 2025." Several global news outlets have performed their own investigations, following up on OX do Controle's declaration.
Eurogamer reached out to its network of "trusty" insiders—their Friday evening update stated that: "(we) can now corroborate the earlier reports/whispers that the Switch 2, once destined for release later in 2024, is now set for Q1 2025...The console's launch moving into early next year—but still within the coming financial year—is designed to ensure Switch 2's launch line-up features as many titles as possible, Eurogamer understands." Video Games Chronicle's Andy Robinson has similarly checked in with his pool of industry spies: "VGC has heard from multiple sources who said Nintendo has told publishers its next console will now launch in Q1 2025. According to the sources, third-party game companies were recently briefed on an internal delay in Nintendo's next-gen launch timing, from late 2024 to early the following year. One publishing source suggested the delay was so that Nintendo could prepare stronger first-party software for the console. It's possible the next-gen Nintendo console will now follow a similar timeline to the Switch, which was released in March but announced the previous year."
Robinson (VGC) has sent a request for an official statement on the matter, but Nintendo is unlikely to field a response (at least not over the weekend). Bloomberg's Japanese office has chipped in with their own findings, again covering similar ground, but narrowed in on Spring time: "Nintendo Co. is advising game publishers that its next-generation console will be delayed until the early months of 2025, according to people with knowledge of the matter...Nintendo has told some publishing executives not to expect the console until March 2025 at the earliest." Bloomberg reported that a Nintendo Japan spokesperson stated that the firm had "nothing to comment on." Prior to this week's calendar adjustment revelation, industry buzz had marked the Switch 2 games console down for a launch period within Q2 to Q4 2024—Nintendo has kept quiet on the matter, as expected. The company's CEO, Shuntaro Furukawa, recently declared that the current Switch model remains a "top priority" in 2024, and an October 2023 Nikkei interview revealed that Nintendo is committed to support its aging platform until March 2025.
The Switch's much anticipated successor has been linked to a custom NVIDIA Orin "T234" SoC—as far back as 2021. Leaked specifications include 12 Cortex-A78AE cores, LPDDR5 memory, and Ampere GPU microarchitecture—suggesting a significant performance uplift over the existing model's almost antique NVIDIA Tegra X1+ chipset. Many Nintendo enthusiasts will be questioning the firm's (rumored) decision to stick with a graphics technology that debuted around late 2020—the Tegra X1+ chip was not exactly a cutting edge part when the Switch first emerged at retail back in March 2017.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
Eurogamer reached out to its network of "trusty" insiders—their Friday evening update stated that: "(we) can now corroborate the earlier reports/whispers that the Switch 2, once destined for release later in 2024, is now set for Q1 2025...The console's launch moving into early next year—but still within the coming financial year—is designed to ensure Switch 2's launch line-up features as many titles as possible, Eurogamer understands." Video Games Chronicle's Andy Robinson has similarly checked in with his pool of industry spies: "VGC has heard from multiple sources who said Nintendo has told publishers its next console will now launch in Q1 2025. According to the sources, third-party game companies were recently briefed on an internal delay in Nintendo's next-gen launch timing, from late 2024 to early the following year. One publishing source suggested the delay was so that Nintendo could prepare stronger first-party software for the console. It's possible the next-gen Nintendo console will now follow a similar timeline to the Switch, which was released in March but announced the previous year."
Robinson (VGC) has sent a request for an official statement on the matter, but Nintendo is unlikely to field a response (at least not over the weekend). Bloomberg's Japanese office has chipped in with their own findings, again covering similar ground, but narrowed in on Spring time: "Nintendo Co. is advising game publishers that its next-generation console will be delayed until the early months of 2025, according to people with knowledge of the matter...Nintendo has told some publishing executives not to expect the console until March 2025 at the earliest." Bloomberg reported that a Nintendo Japan spokesperson stated that the firm had "nothing to comment on." Prior to this week's calendar adjustment revelation, industry buzz had marked the Switch 2 games console down for a launch period within Q2 to Q4 2024—Nintendo has kept quiet on the matter, as expected. The company's CEO, Shuntaro Furukawa, recently declared that the current Switch model remains a "top priority" in 2024, and an October 2023 Nikkei interview revealed that Nintendo is committed to support its aging platform until March 2025.
The Switch's much anticipated successor has been linked to a custom NVIDIA Orin "T234" SoC—as far back as 2021. Leaked specifications include 12 Cortex-A78AE cores, LPDDR5 memory, and Ampere GPU microarchitecture—suggesting a significant performance uplift over the existing model's almost antique NVIDIA Tegra X1+ chipset. Many Nintendo enthusiasts will be questioning the firm's (rumored) decision to stick with a graphics technology that debuted around late 2020—the Tegra X1+ chip was not exactly a cutting edge part when the Switch first emerged at retail back in March 2017.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source