Well, unless someone has been living under a rock for the past four years, freshly launched gaming hardware getting scalped to oblivion should hardly come as a surprise. We witnessed this just recently with the launch of the NVIDIA RTX 50-series GPUs, considering the multiple-thousand-dollar premiums that the cards were sold for on platforms such as eBay. One might foresee a similar predicament for the much-awaited Nintendo Switch 2, but if Nintendo President Furakawa's recent statements are anything to go by, that might not be the case after all.
According to Furakawa, Nintendo is well-aware of the potential stock shortages that the Switch 2 may face, taking lessons from the OG Switch launch back in 2017, and is taking "all possible measures" to make sure the Switch 2 launch plays out smoothly. Of course, what this essentially means, is that Nintendo will be attempting its best to produce as many units of the Switch 2 as possible in order to meet customer demand at launch. This is exactly what Furakawa mentioned in his interview with Nikkei, citing that the supply chain constraints that hindered production in 2024 and 2023 no longer exist in 2025. As such, there should not be any further hurdles that hold back Nintendo from its production targets.
Of course, how all of this plays out in real life is yet to be seen. Nintendo is widely expected to launch the Switch 2 at its Nintendo Direct event on the 2nd of April, following the recently uploaded first-ever teaser on YouTube which has now amassed over 20 million views as of this writing. The Switch 2 is expected to be powered by the Tegra T239 SoC with an Ampere iGPU with slightly over 3 TFLOPS of raw performance, along with a larger display and improved magnetic, hall-effect Joy-Cons.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
According to Furakawa, Nintendo is well-aware of the potential stock shortages that the Switch 2 may face, taking lessons from the OG Switch launch back in 2017, and is taking "all possible measures" to make sure the Switch 2 launch plays out smoothly. Of course, what this essentially means, is that Nintendo will be attempting its best to produce as many units of the Switch 2 as possible in order to meet customer demand at launch. This is exactly what Furakawa mentioned in his interview with Nikkei, citing that the supply chain constraints that hindered production in 2024 and 2023 no longer exist in 2025. As such, there should not be any further hurdles that hold back Nintendo from its production targets.
Of course, how all of this plays out in real life is yet to be seen. Nintendo is widely expected to launch the Switch 2 at its Nintendo Direct event on the 2nd of April, following the recently uploaded first-ever teaser on YouTube which has now amassed over 20 million views as of this writing. The Switch 2 is expected to be powered by the Tegra T239 SoC with an Ampere iGPU with slightly over 3 TFLOPS of raw performance, along with a larger display and improved magnetic, hall-effect Joy-Cons.
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source