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Everything We Know About Nintendo's Rumored New Switch Model(s) So Far

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While the PS4 and Xbox One may be nearing the end of their life cycles, the Nintendo Switch is still very much just getting started. Nintendo's hybrid console burst onto the market two years ago and has been riding a wave of momentum ever since. As of March 31, the system has sold more than 34 million units worldwide, already overtaking the Nintendo 64's lifetime sales and putting it on pace with those of the company's most successful home console, the Wii.

Despite the system's impressive sales, reports have begun to circulate that Nintendo is already working on new iterations of the Switch that will supposedly launch later this year. Nintendo, for its part, has neither confirmed nor denied the rumors, so whether such models exist is still conjecture at this point. That said, Nintendo has a long history of refreshing its consoles every few years, particularly its handhelds, and there's enough evidence to suggest the company will take the same approach with the Switch. With that in mind, let's take a look at everything we know so far about these rumored new Switch models.

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Now Playing: Nintendo Switch Has Sold More Than PS4 In Japan - GS News Update

How Many New Switch Models Are Coming?

This past March, the Wall Street Journal reported that two new Nintendo Switch models would be released in 2019: a less expensive iteration with pared down features, and an "enhanced" version targeted at "avid" gamers. The following month, Japanese newspaper Nikkei published its own report about a lower-cost Switch, saying that a less expensive version of the system is coming this fall. Nikkei's story didn't touch on the "enhanced" Switch model mentioned in the Wall Street Journal's report, but it did claim that development on a "next-generation" version of the system would begin following the less expensive model.

Lending further weight to the rumor, Bloomberg also published a report in April claiming that a cheaper Switch would be released this year. According to the publication, the system will launch as soon as the end of June. However, Bloomberg's report noted that the more powerful Switch model mentioned by the Wall Street Journal was "not in the works;" rather, the current Switch would get some kind of "modest upgrade" this year, although what that entails was not specified. While that likely rules out the possibility of an "enhanced" version of the system being released any time soon, there seems to be enough evidence that a cheaper model is on the way sometime this year.

What Has Nintendo Said About The New Switch?

Nintendo typically has a policy of not commenting on rumors or speculation, but the company has made general statements in response to the reports about potential new Switch models. During an earnings call last month, Nintendo president Shuntaro Furukawa said, "As a general rule, we're always working on new hardware and we will announce it when we are able to sell it." While not an outright denial, Furukawa's response is carefully worded and doesn't rule out the possibility that a new iteration of the Switch could be coming this year.

Will The New Switch Be At E3 2019?

While new game consoles are traditionally unveiled at E3, it doesn't appear that will be the case with the rumored new Switch. Despite not outright denying the existence of a cheaper model, Nintendo president Furukawa categorically dispelled rumors that a new system would be revealed at the annual trade show, saying the company has "no plans to announce [new hardware] at this year's E3 in June." Still, while Furukawa may have put the breaks on an E3 reveal, his comments leave open the possibility that Nintendo could announce a Switch revision sometime before or after the expo.

How Will The New Switch Be Different?

While nothing has been confirmed yet, the Wall Street Journal reports the new, less expensive Switch model would be positioned as a "cheaper option for casual gamers." In order to cut costs, Nintendo would reportedly remove certain features, such as controller vibration. Nikkei claims the cheaper Switch is being "designed for portable use," although the system would still be compatible with a dock and playable on a television.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Nintendo is viewing the new Switch as a "successor" to its 3DS line, which the company has in recent years marketed as a budget-priced handheld aimed at children. This would seem to further support Nikkei's claim that the system is being designed primarily for handheld play. The reported timing of the system's release would make sense as well, as Nintendo has a number of Switch games on the way this year that will assuredly be big hits among children, including Pokemon Sword and Shield and a new Animal Crossing.

Got a news tip or want to contact us directly? Email news@gamespot.com


kevknez

Kevin Knezevic

Kevin Knezevic is an associate news editor who has been writing for GameSpot since 2017. Star Fox Adventures is good and he will die on that hill.

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artylic

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**Girly Squeal** NEW ANIMAL CROSSING!! Words can't describe how excited I am for this!

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Pittsburghler

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Unreal. You just got paid to write an article about what you know about the new Switch which basically says that you don’t know anything about the new Switch. You should write self-help books bro. Your talent is wasted here.

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crypticpurpose

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The rumor about the cheaper, 2DS-style variant are effectively confirmed - it will either come out early summer, or around holiday shopping time (that's just business sense - cheap consoles are going to get the best start while kids are on their long summer break, or when parents are in need of an Xmas present). I'd say holidays, but I wouldn't put any money on that bet, just gut instinct. Well, that, and summer is nearly here, and they haven't started advertising it yet for parents to add to their budgets.

I believe in another variant being readied as well, but I doubt it will be a higher-performance model - there is no sense in them fragmenting their market at this point, and the basic Switch is still going for a high-enough price that they would see limited sales on a Pro/X variant.

On the other hand, the launch design has a hardware-based exploit that, while effectively blocked by a patch in more recent production runs, still presents a major vulnerability to the platform in the long-term. They've essentially put up a hastily assembled plywood barricade that they hope will hold off the swarms of hackers, pirates and home-brewers long enough for them to figure out a real solution, but they know it's only a matter of time before it gets broken down. The 3DS was cracked incredibly early in its life-cycle, and the current iteration of the crack is so beautiful, the process should be documented in a museum... and that was without a gaping security hole.

My guess is they've been working on a modified hardware variant of the standard Switch almost since the moment its vulnerability became public - the reason they didn't simply switch over long before now being that they had already completed the tooling and manufacturing prep for the original, and almost certainly had a bundle of multi-year contracts with various component-manufacturers that they couldn't simply slip out of without massive early-termination penalties. Plus, it takes time to shift your production capacity to a new design, both for them, and their third-party component partners.

From the rumors of a new, powered-up Switch, I'm guessing they are finally getting close to being able to manufacture the new model in sufficient volume to meet market demand, and production of the original is likely set to wind down over the next few months, so long as sufficient current stock remains for a smooth transition. The rumors were likely discreetly leaked by Nintendo PR specifically to build hype and expectations (which i would explain why only two publications published directly on them, rather than the usual "everyone and their mom" explosion of information leaks entail).

Again, I doubt it will be a significant enhancement over the original. I am thinking something closer to the Vita Slim, the PSP-2000/3000 or the DS variants; they'll probably use some of the technological advances since the original went into production to lower manufacturing costs, it will probably be slightly lighter, have a slightly improved battery, maybe the screen will be brighter, have a better contrast ratio, use less power, etc, and it will likely feature better thermal management. All of these factors would contribute to allowing it to "boost" itself more without overheating or draining the battery as rapidly, lending some basic truth to the "powered-up" rumors, just not in a way the fan-base was anticipating. Crucially for them, though, all other factors aside, it will ship without the current hardware vulnerability (as will the cheaper "2DS" version). It may seem a little late for damage control, but every unit they ship without the exploit should help increase the overall attachment-rate for the platform as a whole; they can't put the cat back in the bag, but they can consider it sunk cost and finally start selling cat-bags that at least don't have a hole in the bottom.

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dzimm

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Wow, an article about unfounded speculation and rumor. Awesome.

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Abdulrahman1981

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I really wish triple A titles come to the Switch even if graphics is downgraded

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crypticpurpose

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@Abdulrahman1981: Sadly, the GPU on the Switch is pretty much its most powerful component - the issue with porting AAA titles to the Switch is its CPU, memory, and the fact that it runs on a completely different processor architecture. It may have blazing fast memory-access times, due to everything being interested into a single SoC, but since AAA titles made for other consoles weren't designed around taking advantage of that fact, it can't be fully put to use.

All the current AAA titles are designed around, and optimized for, x86 systems, specifically, the hardware limitations presented by the PS4 and XBO. The Switch just has a completely different system profile, so games developed for the former are never going to be able to make full use of the latter's hardware, and that is putting aside the fact that the Switch hardware, even ignoring architectural differences, is simply objectively much less powerful.

It's kind of like the inter-generational games they came out after the PS4/XBO launched - because so many people still had previous-gen systems, publishers released games for both; but the games on the older gen were often pared down in terms of features and gameplay, because they simply didn't have the necessary horsepower to run the full game, no matter how much they reduced the graphics quality. They weren't simply slower, they were also just plain different. ME: Shadow of Mordor is probably the best example of this.

The Switch, like all the Nintendo consoles over the past decade+, was consciously designed to not directly compete with Sony and Microsoft, but instead to create a unique experience different from theirs. By creating their own market, distinct from the others, they can freely make profit without worrying about threats from the other two.

You're never going to see the majority of AAA games from the other consoles on the Switch, and the ones you do, will probably provide a sub-par experience compared to their original versions. If you really, really want AAA games, get a PS4, as it has the biggest selection and the most exclusives. The Switch is in a category of its own, and there isn't all that much overlap with the others. That's why I bought the Switch in addition to the others - it offers games you'll never see on the PS4 or XBO.

Granted, I'm mostly still waiting for ones that actually interest me (i.e., Fire Emblem, SMT V), and haven't even booted mine up yet - but I knew they would happen going in. Don't get angry at Nintendo because you want the Switch to be something it's not.

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Jrxbarrett

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Edited By Jrxbarrett

This better be like $200.

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silv3rst0rm

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I'm wondering...
These mid-life "tuned up" consoles must be tricking the sale numbers big time!

Having us interested in renewing our current generation consoles by buying a more powerful variant of the same gen is without a doubt pumping the sales numbers.

I, myself, bought a PS4 some time around launch and bought a PS4 Pro last hollidays.
So, technically, I bought 2 PS4s. (And a lot of people did so!)
I never had to buy a second Nes, Snes, N64 or any consoles at all beyond their initial models.

No doubt today console sales numbers are higher than the previous gens since we're buying them twice, some do buy even more! (MS must have some fanatics who bought launch XBOX Ones, Then an "S" for its 4K support, then the "X" for enhanced performance...)
That's without counting the fact that Devs are giving up (for the most part) Couch-Coop options so there are often more than a console in a single household to play Coop which wasn't happening before.

So, the Switch will, without a doubt, beat the Wii in sales numbers since they'll be releasing an enhanced model that the elitists will buy.

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dotWithShoes

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"Put the breaks on" just looks wrong...

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Packer1080

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How about some new games? This is what happens to Nintendo. They can't rely on doing themselves. Bringing in 4 year old ports won't help either.

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silv3rst0rm

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@Packer1080: That's why the Nintendo switch should be considered a complementary console!

I couldn't figure myself having ONLY a Switch to play games!
(...but I couldn't figure myself without it neither.)

If anyone is shopping for a console when they don't have any, they should chose PS4 or Xbox One.

The switch is great a part-time gaming console!

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ymo1965

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Edited By ymo1965

@Packer1080: Agree, I own many of the ports the Switch was getting and that really annoyed me. The older Nintendo consoles had more decent titles tbh. There just doesnt seem to be that many for the Switch, or at least compared to older machines. I am happy with my rig, so I sold the Switch and used the money to buy a vive wireless adaptor. Each to their own.

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aross2004

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Clickroll'd!

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deactivated-64a860a062bda

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So two sites that are not regular sources for game related news is worthy to report now? Will there be a cheaper model? Probably, but they won't announce a console at E3, so one coming in June is out of the question and I doubt they'd use a direct for one. They won't hold a direct before E3 either given how close that is. The "more powerful" console is most likely the recent boost mode update that was made available to developers, nothing more.

You guys have been posting so many inaccurate articles lately you're starting to become as bad as Gamefaqs posters and randoms on social media. Between advertising Xbox exclusives (which don't exist) and new Switch models (which don't exist and support absolutely no proof of existing), I wonder why I continue to click on your articles. Next time do a little bit of fact checking instead of using incorrect terminology and rumors for your sources.

Edit : What the president said isn't safe, it's common sense. Companies are always working on new hardware.

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ZacharyStarks

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Edited By ZacharyStarks

Stop posting fake news,. The president of Nintendo already said last year ain't gonna be a new switch in the cards yet,. Yes it probably will happen eventually,. But it wont be this year,. Stop hyping up news that's false and trying to make it into something its not,.. but I know that's how yall get paid,. Post false and misleading headlines just to get clicks,.. Very dirty practice,.

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Jrxbarrett

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@zacharystarks: This isn't the only place reporting this. I would buy a cheaper switch

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Cappy

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I’m starting to skip articles on Gamespot unless there is clear value in the headline, because more and more articles are click bait, like this one. If it’s speculation/rumors, make it clear in the headline.

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mattsaroni24

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Edited By mattsaroni24

Nintendo, for its part, has neither confirmed nor denied the rumor

Jan 25th - “Nintendo currently has no plans to make new Switch console models, company president Shuntaro Furukawa says.”

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Lord_Sesshy

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Fixed the article for you.

"Here is what we know: Nothing."

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Spartan_418

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Yes please, more powerful Switch model, would be great to be able to play Ark: Survival Evolved on the go without going blind

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blazingsonic

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Another speculation click bait article, Should I even bother? These days it's best to wait for info from official Nintendo outlets.

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Ragnarok1051

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You should probably put in the headline something pertaining to speculation. Headline sounds like confirmed when all of this is speculation at this point.

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