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Nintendo might charge less for digital Switch games?

New pricing suggests digital titles could be cheaper than physical copies on Switch 2.

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Nintendo

Nintendo might finally be doing something gamers have been asking for… forever. The company has officially confirmed that Switch 2 games will have different pricing for digital and physical versions, with digital copies expected to be cheaper.

The change begins in May 2026, starting with titles like Yoshi and the Mysterious Book. For example, early listings on the eShop show the game priced at $59.99 digitally vs $69.99 physically, marking a clear shift in how Nintendo handles game pricing.

Why is Nintendo doing this?

Let’s be real, physical games are comparatively expensive to make. Nintendo says the change reflects the higher costs of manufacturing and distributing cartridges, compared to digital downloads. This aligns with what the industry has been doing for years, except Nintendo has been one of the few holdouts where digital and physical games often cost the same.

There’s also a bigger strategy at play here. By making digital games cheaper, Nintendo could nudge more players toward digital purchases. That essentially translates to higher margins, fewer logistics headaches, and a tighter grip on its ecosystem. In other words, this isn’t just about fairness in pricing… It’s also about where Nintendo wants its future sales to go.

What does this mean for players?

So, does this mean all games going forward will have different prices? Well, not exactly, and this is where things get a little messy. While Nintendo is setting a lower MSRP for digital games, actual pricing can still vary depending on the title and retailer. Plus, not every game will follow the same pattern, so bigger releases could still carry higher price tags, making the gap between digital and physical a bit inconsistent.

For players, though, this is still a win. Digital games are finally getting a clear pricing advantage after years of being oddly equal (or sometimes pricier) than physical copies. That said, the trade-off remains. Physical games can be resold or shared, while digital ones stay locked to your account.

Varun Mirchandani
Varun is an experienced technology journalist and editor with over eight years in consumer tech media. His work spans…
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