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Almost All Physical Third-Party Nintendo Switch 2 Games in Japan Are Game-Key Cards — and It Looks Like It’s a Similar Situation in the West

It has emerged that almost all physical third-party Nintendo Switch 2 games in Japan revealed so far are Game-Key Cards, and it looks like a similar situation in the West.

As reported by Gematsu, the launch of Switch 2 pre-orders in Japan revealed all physical third-party games so far except for CD Projekt’s Cyberpunk 2077 and that are not Nintendo Switch 2 Editions, ship on Game-Key Cards and thus require access to the internet to download the full game.

But what is the situation in the West? Here, Sega’s Switch 2 games are Game-Key Cards. The listing for Sonic X Shadow Generations on Walmart, for example, confirms as much.

In fact, we’ve found only four third-party physical Switch 2 games that aren’t Game-Key Cards: the aforementioned Cyberpunk 2077, Daemon X Machina: Titanic Scion – Nintendo Switch 2; Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma – Nintendo Switch 2; and No Sleep For Kaname Date – From AI: THE SOMNIUM FILES Aiba Edition.

When Nintendo pulled back the curtain on Switch 2, it confirmed that several new Switch 2 game cards won’t always carry an actual game, but instead contain a key for a game download. Nintendo later clarified that Switch 2 Edition games contain both the game and the upgrade on the cartridge itself.

Switch 2 Game-Key Cards are physical cards that only contain a key to download your chosen game. That means there’s no actual game data on the card you insert into your Switch 2, so you’ll need to download it once the card is inserted. Every Game-Key Card case is appropriately labeled on the lower portion of the front of the box, so if you’re concerned about what exactly you’re purchasing, you should have a heads-up right away.

Games like Street Fighter 6 and the Bravely Default remaster do indeed feature this game-key card disclaimer. Others, such as Mario Kart World and Donkey Kong Bananza, do not. The beefy Cyberpunk 2077, which weighs in at 64 GB on Nintendo Switch 2, comes on cart.

As pointed out by Daniel Ahmad, Director of Research & Insights at Niko Partners, this focus on Game-Key Cards may put extreme pressure on the eShop around the Switch 2’s launch in June as fans rush to download their games.

“Game cards are significantly more expensive than discs (+ increases with each GB),” Ahmad added, explaining the reasoning for publishers.

“It takes time to ramp up production of multiple storage capacity game cards. Digital games / lower capacity cards offer higher margins for publishers. Digital is the majority of sales.”

Christopher Dring, Editor-In-Chief and Co-Founder of The Game Business, went as far as to say the Game-Key Cards are “basically Christmas/birthday present boxes for wrapping up.”

“Ultimately, with fewer games retailers, rising manufacturing costs, the fact that younger generations just don’t care, plus the drive for sustainability, all points in one direction for physical media,” Dring added.

Switch 2 pre-orders kicked off yesterday, April 24, and quickly sold out. Now, Nintendo fans are posting fake Switch 2 auctions to flood eBay and drown out scalper listings.

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.

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