Nintendo
hasn’t
announced
its
Switch
successor
yet,
but
we
do
know
one
thing
for
sure:
it
will
be
able
to
play
current
Switch
games
and
have
carryover
for
your
Nintendo
Switch
Online
services
and
account.
The
news
was
announced
during
Nintendo’s
midyear
policy
briefing,
with
further
information
promised
“at
a
later
date.”
Nintendo
also
talked
about
numbers
for
the
current
Switch
(PDF),
noting
that
it
sold
4.72
million
units
in
the
past
three
months,
a
drop
of
31
percent
compared
to
the
same
period
last
year
but
well
above
previous
consoles
eight
years
after
they
launched.
That
adds
up
to
146
million
Switch
units
sold
and
a
new
record
for
software
sales
on
a
Nintendo
platform,
which
reached
1.3
billion
units
as
of
September
30th,
2024.
It
also
noted
that
Switch
Online
subscriptions
dropped
slightly
from
last
year
to
about
34
million
members.
At
the
same
time,
the
number
of
people
opting
for
the
pricier
version
with
the
Expansion
Pack
library
of
games
continues
to
increase.
According
to
the
presentation,
“More
software
has
been
played
on
Nintendo
Switch
than
on
any
other
Nintendo
hardware.”
All
three
of
the
major
console
manufacturers
have
had
spotty
records
with
backward
compatibility.
Both
the
Xbox
Series
X
and
the
PS5
are
mostly
backward-compatible.
But
since
the
transition
from
the
Wii
U
involved
going
from
discs
to
cartridges,
the
Switch
is
not.
Playing
a
game
from
previous
Nintendo
consoles
at
the
moment
is
a
function
of
optimism,
involving
the
hope
that
either
Nintendo
releases
a
remastered
Switch
port
or
brings
the
game
to
its
Switch
Online
library,
but
that
won’t
be
the
case
this
time
around.
According
to
Nintendo,
the
Switch
2
(or
whatever
it’s
actually
called)
is
still
on
schedule
to
be
revealed
during
this
fiscal
year,
which
runs
until
the
end
of
March
2025,
without
interrupting
Nintendo’s
existing
connection
with
over
100
million
annual
Switch
players.
The
conversation
about
backward
compatibility
isn’t
just
about
player
satisfaction
but
also
video
game
preservation.
A
report
from
the
Video
Game
History
Foundation
found
that
over
87
percent
of
games
released
before
2010
are
“critically
endangered”
or
unavailable
for
purchase.
While
Nintendo
has
brought
some
of
its
back
catalog
to
the
Switch,
there
are
still
a
lot
of
inaccessible
games.
Nintendo
also
directly
contributed
to
the
increasing
scarcity
of
older
games
by
shutting
down
the
Wii
U
/
3DS
e-shop
last
year.
Update,
November
5th,
2024:
Added
additional
details.
(Originally posted by Ash Parrish)
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