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

Devil May Cry just landed on your Switch 2 and it’s only $30 until July 7

All four characters, 60 FPS in handheld, and a $30 price that won't last past July 7.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Devil May Cry 5 arrives in Switch 2.
Nintendo / YouTube

If you own a Switch 2 and have been waiting for a great hack-and-slash game to justify the purchase, today is a good day. 

Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition lands on the eShop on June 23, 2026, at limited-time discounted pricing. Given that it’s a game from a franchise that has sold over 38 million copies, that is a deal worth paying attention to.

So what exactly is in the Devil Hunter Edition?

This is the first time any Devil May Cry game has come to a portable Nintendo device, courtesy of Capcom. 

Recommended Videos

All four playable characters are available from the start: Nero, Dante, V, and Vergil, Dante’s twin brother, whose concentration-based combat style is available across all the main missions in the game. 

DMC5 alone has surpassed 11 million units sold. This Switch 2 port includes the EX Color Pack for alternate costumes, along with additional mechanical arms for Nero (including the classic Mega Buster and the Gerbera GP01). 

The file size clocks in at a manageable 28GB (via Notebookcheck).

Does the port actually hold up on Switch 2?

Capcom’s stated priority was a locked 60 frames per second. The game delivers it in both docked and handheld modes, ensuring smooth gameplay on the handheld console.  

A few things didn’t make the cut, though: hardware ray tracing, Turbo Mode, and the enemy-dense Legendary Dark Knight difficulty. They’re all absent, and might disappoint some Switch owners. 

For most players, however, those are acceptable trade-offs for a game that runs this smoothly in your hands. The eShop version is available from June 23 at $30. The $30 price applies until July 7, after which it moves to $40. A physical edition follows on August 28.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Forget buying a Steam Machine, Valve wants you to build one
The company is improving desktop compatibility and working closely with Nvidia on future support.
Steam Machine LED Progress Bar

Valve's new Steam Machine may be grabbing headlines, primarily because of its price, but the bigger story could be that users won't necessarily need to buy one. Valve has confirmed that SteamOS is becoming increasingly desktop-friendly, opening the door for gamers to build their own Steam Machines using standard PC components and the operating system that powers the Steam Deck.

Valve wants SteamOS to work on more than just Valve hardware

Read more
Valve’s Steam Machine is not a console, which explains both the freedom and the pain
It's a console-shaped PC
Steam Machine Angled Shot

The Steam Machine looks like a console, plugs into a TV like one, and even offers a couch-friendly experience. But Valve is making it clear that it is still a PC. The Steam Machine’s price is very much in PC territory. Valve’s new living-room gaming box starts at $1,049 for the 512GB model, while the 2TB version costs $1,349. If you want the Steam Controller bundled in, that adds another $79.

Priced like a PC, behaves like a console

Read more
Steam Machine reviews praise Valve’s hardware. The real problem is its four-figure price tag
Reviewers love the design, SteamOS, and overall experience, but many struggle to justify paying over $1,000 for
Valve Steam Machine Featured Design Coverplate

The review embargo for Valve's Steam Machine is finally up, and after reading through impressions from major publications, one thing becomes immediately clear: the reviews aren't nearly as mixed as social media would have you believe. In fact, there's a surprising amount of consensus on what Valve got right and where it may have stumbled.

Here's how major reviewers rated the Steam Machine

Read more