
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has praised Nintendo Switch 2, and said the upcoming console realises the vision of the late Nintendo president Satoru Iwata, who worked on the concept for the original Switch platform before he passed away in 2015.
Speaking as part of a Nintendo-published Creator’s Voice video, Huang said he had worked personally with Iwata on Nintendo’s then-audacious plans for a hybrid console capable of playing home console-quality games while on the go.
Now, after working with Nintendo again on the chip that powers Switch 2, Huang said the new console boasted the “most advanced graphics ever in a mobile device”, and offered “a new chapter worthy of Iwata-san’s vision.”
“We’ve worked with Nintendo for more than a decade, drawn together by a shared belief — that technology should serve creativity, and that joy is worth engineering for,” Huang began.
“I still remember the day Iwata-san shared his dream with us. He wanted to create something no-one had seen before: a console powerful enough for big cinematic games, but small enough to take anywhere. It sounded impossible, but that vision became the original Nintendo Switch.
“We lost Iwata-san before the launch, but his clarity, his purpose, it still inspires our work everyday,” Huang continued. “Together, we poured everything into that system. The Nintendo Switch took over 500 engineer years at Nvidia. We rethought the entire stack, chip architecture, OS, APIs, game engines, so the magic could travel with you. The results speak for themselves: over 150 million consoles sold.”
With Switch 2, Huang added, Nvidia and Nintendo not only offered the best visuals ever found in a portable gaming device, but hardware that also enabled support for ray tracing and HDR, while maintaining backwards compatibility for most Switch 1 games.
Nintendo is yet to reveal the Switch 2’s final technical specifications itself, though our friends at Digital Foundry recently did the job for them. One particular point of interest remains the impact to Switch 2’s hardware capability gobbled up by GameChat, which Digital Foundry reported had a “significant impact” on system resources to the point where some developers are said to be concerned.
“Switch 2 is more than a new console,” Huang concluded. “It’s a new chapter worthy of Iwata-san’s vision. To our friends at Nintendo, congratulations. We’re honoured to be on this journey with you.”
Nintendo Switch 2 launches this week, on Thursday June 5, and is expected to sell out upon launch. Indeed, Nintendo is already shipping ‘Out of Stock’ signs to some stores to advertise the console’s lack of availability amid high demand.
IGN has been hands-on with Switch 2 and reported back today that Mario Kart World’s open world isn’t what you think it is — so don’t go in expecting a Nintendo version of Forza Horizon. We’ve also played the $10 mini-game collection Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour, and while enjoyable, it should probably have been free.
Tom Phillips is IGN’s News Editor. You can reach Tom at tom_phillips@ign.com or find him on Bluesky @tomphillipseg.bsky.social