Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. News

Delete Nintendo Switch Online and in six months it will delete your cloud saves

Add as a preferred source on Google
Nintendo Switch Online - Overview Trailer - Nintendo Switch

Nintendo Switch Online is now a paid subscription service, requiring Switch owners to pay $20 per year in order to access online multiplayer. One of the other benefits of having the service is access to cloud game saves, but if you forget to renew your subscription, you can kiss your save data goodbye after six months.

Recommended Videos

The tidbit of very important information was revealed in the official Nintendo Switch Online FAQ page. If you don’t renew your membership before it expires, any save data you’ve stored in the cloud will be gone, though it won’t happen immediately. This doesn’t apply to save data for the classic NES games offered through the service, as that save data is stored locally.

A short time after the cloud data information was revealed, Nintendo told IGN that the deletion actually won’t occur for six months. If your Switch happens to break and your subscription lapses because you needed the money to pay for a repair, for instance, you’ll have enough time to renew it and get your save data back.

A few games will also not be eligible for save data backup. These include Splatoon 2, Pokémon: Let’s Go, and Dark Souls Remastered. Given how much time and energy has to be put into those particular games, it’ll likely cause a few subscribers to feel cheated if they didn’t read the fine print.

Though it seems reasonable to not allow players to access their data until they’ve renewed their subscription, deleting it completely seems especially harsh. The free games given out through PlayStation Plus and Xbox Live Gold are inaccessible once a subscription lapses, but anything you’ve claimed can be played again once you’ve renewed it.

Nintendo joins Sony in requiring users to pay for a subscription service in order to access cloud save backup. The feature is included for free on Xbox One. At the very least, Nintendo Switch Online will automatically back your save data up — this isn’t the case with PlayStation Plus, which requires you to either put your system in “rest” mode or manually upload any save data you want backed up.

The save data choice isn’t the only weird thing Nintendo is doing with the service. During a Nintendo Direct on September 13, the company revealed special NES-style Switch controllers. They’ll ship in packs of two for $60, but they will only be available to paying subscribers, and you can only buy one set of them. Nintendo is taking the Sam’s Club approach to accessories, and we’re a little perplexed.

Gabe Gurwin
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
Asus ROG Ally X gets a special makeover with an OLED panel and gold trims that don’t look gaudy
The bundle includes a translucent black and gold Ally X with OLED screen, TMR joysticks, and AR glasses.
ROG Xbox Ally X20 featured image.

Limited edition gaming hardware has a long history of slapping a commemorative color or accents on existing hardware and calling it a day. 

The ROG Xbox Ally X20 bundle, announced at Computex 2026 to mark the 20th anniversary of ASUS's ROG brand, does not make that mistake. The upgraded design alone makes it worth a closer look.

Read more
AMD’s Radeon RX 9070 GRE has strong 1440p claims, but $549 may be a hard sell
Radeon RX 9070 GRE goes global after China debut
AMD Radeon RX 9070 GRE front view

The Radeon RX 9070 GRE has now launched globally at Computex 2026. AMD first introduced the RDNA 4-based GPU in China in May 2025, so this is a wider rollout rather than a brand-new graphics card.

It will be available from board partners starting June 2, in reference and overclocked versions, with a suggested retail price of $549.

Read more
Alienware’s upgraded gaming monitors offer higher brightness and refresh rate starting at $300
Alienware’s four new 30-inch-plus screens bring higher brightness, faster refresh rates, and cheaper 240Hz options.
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Alienware has four new screens coming out of Computex 2026, and the lineup cuts across almost every tier that serious PC gamers care about. Its latest Alienware gaming monitors put brighter OLED, faster ultrawide refresh rates, and $299.99 240Hz QHD gaming into one launch window.

The range includes a 39-inch 5K OLED flagship, a 34-inch 280Hz QD-OLED ultrawide, and two 240Hz QHD LCD options at 32 inches and 34 inches. That spread gives Alienware a high-end halo product while pushing fast QHD screens closer to mainstream upgrade territory.

Read more