Enjoy it while it lasts: This is the closest the Nintendo Switch will be to any of its competitors
switch
switch

Nintendo

  • The Nintendo Switch is finally getting the support from third-party developers and publishers that fans have been craving for years.

  • Unfortunately, many high-end third-party games are difficult to port to the Nintendo Switch — and that will only become more challenging when the next versions of the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One consoles arrive within the next few years.


After many years of neglect from third-party game makers, Nintendo is finally getting some in-demand, heavy-hitting games from outside developers thanks to the popularity of its one-year-old console, the Switch.

Many of the games being ported to the Switch are on the older side — the Nintendo Switch is less powerful than rival game consoles, so it can't keep up with many blockbuster games you can play on the PlayStation 4 or Xbox One. But lately, some developers have been able to get their newer games onto the Switch just several months after launching those games on more powerful consoles.

"Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus," a game that launched for the PS4 and Xbox One in October 2017, released on the Nintendo Switch in June 2018.

"Doom," which launched on the PS4 and Xbox One in May 2016, came out on the Switch in November 2017. (The same company that developed the port, Panic Button, is also working on the sequel to this game, called "Doom Eternal," to be released "alongside" the PS4 and Xbox One. Whether that means the release date will be the exact same day remains to be seen.)

"Fortnite," which launched on PS4 and Xbox One in October 2017, released on the Switch in June 2018.

As Kotaku's Ethan Gach put so well, "the Nintendo Switch is a port machine." From the triple-A games listed above to other indie titles like "Hollow Knight" and "Stardew Valley," and even Wii U titles that not many people experienced like "Donkey Kong Country: Tropical Freeze" and "Bayonetta 2," Nintendo's portable console has been a great way to give life to older games.

In its current form, the Nintendo Switch will continue to be a great way to experience Nintendo games, indie games, and some bigger third-party games. But the big third-party games that everyone likes — the Dooms and Wolfensteins of the world — will be more difficult to come by once rival consoles start evolving. And that's apparently already in the works.

The PlayStation 4 and Xbox One are about to get new hardware

The PlayStation 4 and Xbox One both launched about five years ago, in 2013. And both consoles are already more powerful than the one-year-old Nintendo Switch.