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Switch 1 Prices Soar Despite The Launch of Switch 2
- Image by Pixabay | Courtesy of Pexels

Oh, Nintendo. You’ve done it again, and not in the way fans had hoped. If you were saving up for a shiny new Switch 2, you might want to sit down. Turns out, when Nintendo announced price changes, they “graciously” decided not to jack up the price of the Switch 2… yet.

Alright, so what’s the deal here? The original Nintendo Switch family, which has been out since 2017, is finally costing more. The base Switch now sits at $339.99, which is a $40 jump from the OG price of $299.99. The OLED model? Up by $50, landing at $399.99 (which, ironically, is nearly bumping elbows with the Switch 2’s $449.99 price tag). Oh, and the Switch Lite has jumped to $229.99 because, apparently, no one is safe.

More Expensive Switch 1 Over Switch 2? Honestly, Why?

The Switch 2 has quietly remained at $449.99, leaving fans scratching their heads. Though it might not have the OLED screen or family nostalgia factor of its predecessors, it is new tech. That’s a bigger carrot for most gamers and collectors. One major highlight is how the new unit has reportedly sold more than 6 million units worldwide already. Oh, and good luck trying to get one, considering their seemingly “manufactured scarcity.”

Nintendo’s explanation turned out to be the same old corporate jargon. According to them, the industry’s good ol’ “market conditions” make this price hike “necessary.” This term is usually code for “LOL, tariffs, materials, and ‘because we can.’” This is the same reasoning behind the Alarmo Clock and Joy-Con bundle hikes, which prove no niche item is off the dollar-inflation chopping block.

Nostalgia vs Eying Shiny Stuff on the Horizon?

With the thin price gap between Switch models, you’d think they’d throw in a few sweeteners or promos for those still interested in the OG Switch. But nope, nada. And hey, while we’re here decoding these wallet-slapping reasons, it almost feels like a spicy test move before they start prodding at Switch 2 price tiers. After all, the mounting demand is Nintendo’s secret party trick in long-game pricing strategies. Fans love it but also hate it. Nintendo knows it. It’s just part of the cycle.

What Does This Mean for Gamers?

The usual options apply:

  • Stick to your beloved older devices until the prices make you cry less.
  • Hunt for secondhand deals now that collectors might unload their consoles for that Switch 2 upgrade hype.
  • Sell that first-gen Switch online before the resale value spirals into irrelevance.

And for those firmly in the Switch 2 camp today, well, that $449.99 price tag feels a lot softer in the wallet when you compare it to the increasingly expensive past-gen lineup. Silver linings everywhere.

Oh Nintendo, Don’t Switch Flip that 2

For now, this entire situation screams, “take my money with strings attached,” and if nothing else, it just reinforces why you might want to future-proof some savings for inevitable Switch 2 “accessory upgrades” or downloadable content shenanigans… whenever they show that side of their hand.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Gaming and was syndicated with permission.

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