The best October Prime Day deals on Nintendo Switch games

October Prime Day deals on Nintendo Switch games are here, and there’s quite a few to choose from, including Mario, Zelda, and more

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October Prime Day deals on Nintendo Switch games are here, and there’s quite a few to choose from. Nintendo is notorious for rarely discounting its first-party games, but a handful slipped through the cracks this go around. Square Enix swooped in with a cartload of deals as well on everything from Octopath Traveler 2 to NieR Automata. There’s a bit of Fire Emblem, some No Man’s Sky, farm games, and even a hot retro throwback.

These are our picks for the best October Prime Day sales on Switch.

Another iconic Nintendo series is getting the Lego treatment soon

Nintendo and Lego are teaming up again for another crossover featuring an iconic series, and this time, it’s Animal Crossing

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Nintendo and Lego are teaming up again for another crossover featuring an iconic series, and this time, it’s Animal Crossing. Nintendo announced the Animal Crossing Lego collaboration in a short video on Twitter, a few months after seemingly wrapping up the Super Mario Lego line for good.

The video was all Nintendo shared about the Animal Crossing Lego sets, but it shows quite a few fan-favorite characters. Rosie, Bunnie, and Marshall make an appearance, alongside Fauna and Julian, and then series figureheads Tom Nook, Isabelle, and Kapp’n the kappa. There’s also a brief shot of a Lego balloon present floating around and plenty of Lego fruit trees and Lego flowers.

That’s about it, but leaks from earlier in 2023 suggest we won’t have to wait long for more. Lego leaker Falconbricks said Nintendo and Lego plan to launch the line in March 2024, which will reportedly consist of five sets.

Falconbricks said these would range from a 170-piece set for $14.99 to a 535-piece set for $74.99. Whether those are the only planned sets or if Lego will launch expansions, as they did for the Super Mario and Donkey Kong sets remains to be seen.

What they may include is anyone’s guess, though there’s certainly plenty of choice when it comes to Animal Crossing buildings. Blathers’ museum, the Able Sisters’ shop, and Tom Nook’s depot are some obvious choices that have been around in some form since the series began on the Nintendo Gamecube in 2003.

Nintendo has largely remained quiet on the Animal Crossing front since New Horizons‘ 2.0 patch launched in 2021, and while Switch 2 rumors are beginning to sound like more than just speculation, there’s still no suggestion as to what might be ahead in the cozy life game‘s future.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

NBCUniversal unveils new details about Epic Universe, including its Nintendo area and facial recognition

Hold on to your childhood. NBCUniveral has revealed details about their new theme park, Epic Universe, and it’s glorious.

Going to a theme park as a kid is an adventure. Going to a theme park as an adult is an investment. NBCUniversal wants to ensure that visitors walk away with priceless memories no matter where they fall on that spectrum.

On Thursday, the company unveiled new details about a theme park opening 2025 in Florida. It’s appropriately named Universal Epic Universe and pushes the envelope on conventional theme parks and attractions.

“It’s the most technologically advanced park we’ve ever done,” Mark Woodbury, CEO of Universal Destinations & Experiences, explains. “And that speaks to both the attractions themselves, the next generation of robotics drone technology, all the way through to the guest experience. The full guest journey is really being taken to a whole new level.”

The park will feature “facial recognition” and “photo validation technology,” allowing guests to have a “frictionless” experience. However, that’s not all that Epic Universe will bring to Florida. NBCUniversal confirms that the park will have themed areas, including Nintendo Land, with a bigger footprint than similar spaces in Japan and California.

Ultimately, Woodbury hopes that adding Epic Universe to its other parks and properties will entice visitors to stay for at least a week.

“[It’s] an opportunity for us to look at: how do we expand visitation to the Orlando market that would garner us a full-week vacation? Right now, we get a good three days.”

Say less, NBCUniversal. I’m already planning future vacations.

Nintendo Direct September 2023 recap: Paper Mario, SpyxFamily, F-Zero, and more

The September Nintendo Direct crammed dozens of Nintendo Switch game announcements and updates into 40 minutes, and these are the highlights

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The September Nintendo Direct crammed dozens of Nintendo Switch game announcements and updates into 40 minutes, with a few surprises sprinkled on top. A classic Paper Mario game is coming back to life, along with F-Zero, and a DS adventure game that never launched outside Japan. Nintendo showcased new Splatoon 3 updates, more on Princess Peach’s new solo venture, a SpyxFamily game, and a whole lot more.

There’s no Switch 2 news, though, so if you’re looking for that, you’ll probably have to wait until 2024.

Nintendo is bringing F-Zero back as an online multiplayer game

Nintendo’s F-Zero racing game series idled its high-powered engines for the past 20 years, but it’s back now – as an online game

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Nintendo’s F-Zero racing game series idled its high-powered engines for the past 20 years, but it’s back now – as an online game. Nintendo announced F-Zero 99 during the September Direct, a blend of SNES F-Zero with a few new features and multiplayer play that supports matches with up to 99 people.

It’s essentially Pac-Man 99, but with F-Zero. You pick your favorite machine, manage classic F-Zero race courses at unbelievably high speeds, blow up a few times, and hope that you might actually finish. 

Machines have a boost meter and a meter that functions like car health. Your boost meter lets you, well, boost for a short time, though it’s a real risk-reward situation. You might speed your way ahead of the competition – or you could end up in last place.

Bumping into objects or crashing too often depletes your car health, until eventually, you erupt into flames – not an ideal outcome.  If you’re lucky, though, you can jump onto the Skyway, a narrow course above the main racetrack that helps push you ahead of your rivals.

F-Zero 99 comes with goals and objectives that reward you with medals, which you can use to customize your machine. These are just cosmetic changes and don’t influence how your machine performs.

Like Pac-Man 99 before it, F-Zero 99 is only available for active Nintendo Switch Online subscribers, though you don’t need the Expansion Pack to access it. Pac-Man 99 lasted two years and shuts down in October 2023. How long Nintendo plans to keep F-Zero 99 around remains uncertain.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

Nintendo is reviving a classic Mario game on Switch

Nintendo announced a brand-new Mario Vs. Donkey Kong game for Nintendo Switch during the September Direct, a reboot of the GBA original

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Nintendo announced a brand-new Mario Vs. Donkey Kong game for Nintendo Switch during the September Direct, the first time the Super Mario spinoff series has seen the light of day in seven years. The new Mario Vs. Donkey Kong is called just Mario Vs. Donkey Kong, which is fitting, since it seems like a soft reboot for the series that streamlines some of the more chaotic elements.

The premise is this: Donkey Kong, fueled by an undying love of shiny toys, seizes a factory’s worth of Mario minis and flees with his ill-gotten gains. It’s essentially the same Mario Vs. Donkey Kong setup as always, but with a few minor differences from the later games.

Mario Vs. Donkey Kong first released on Game Boy Advance before marching onto the Nintendo DS with more complicated touch-screen puzzles and an ever-growing army of mini-Marios to shepherd through each stage. In the Switch version, you’re guiding only Mario through intricately designed levels filled with traps, enemies, and obstacles.

Your goal is grabbing a key and maybe recover some of the stolen Mario toys before moving on to the next level, and there’s a boss fight with Donkey Kong at the end of each themed world.

Mario Vs. Donkey Kong on Switch launches Feb. 16, 2024, and pre-orders are open now.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

Nintendo teases Splatoon 3 roguelike DLC in September Direct

After months of silence, Nintendo brought Splatoon 3’s DLC Side Order back out for the September Direct and teased a roguelike element

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After months of silence, Nintendo brought Splatoon 3’s DLC Side Order back out for the September Direct and teased a roguelike element. Side Order takes place in an alternate realm devoid of color – but rocking some pretty slick techno vibes anyway – and while we don’t know what the narrative premise is behind it, the trailer suggests your goal is restoring color.

Or maybe it’s just splatting robotic-looking otherworldly sea critters. Either way, you, Agent Eight, meet with new character Acht – “eight” in German – and get a range of color chips you can slot into a fancy computer system to augment your ink. It’s not just your ink color, either. Different color chips boost your stats in different ways.

Nintendo didn’t go into detail about Side Order, but they did say it’s designed “to be replayed over and over.” Between that and the different, possibly random, power-ups, it sounds a lot like a roguelike.

There’s plenty of Splatoon lore in the mix as well. You, Eight, have a sassy robot companion, and Acht apparently knows Pearl from Splatoon 2. You go it alone in Side Order, though. As Nintendo previously said, the Splatoon 3 DLC is a single-player campaign – no online multiplayer this time.

We still have a while to see how it all fits together, though. Splatoon 3’s Side Order DLC launches on Nintendo Switch sometime in spring 2024.

This man found the rarest Nintendo game ever by accident

A series of incredibly lucky coincidences led one man to uncovering the rarest Nintendo game, almost without intending to

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A series of incredibly lucky coincidences led one man to uncover the rarest Nintendo game, almost without him intending to. The game is Sky Skipper, a 1980s Nintendo arcade game, the product of Super Mario Bros. creator Shigeru Miyamoto and hardware developer Genyo Takeda – and one of the company’s biggest commercial failures (thanks, The Guardian).

Nintendo eventually made clear concepts and fun gameplay the core of its design philosophy, and collector and retro enthusiast Alex Crowley told The Guardian that Sky Skipper suffered from having neither. The goal was helping a flying gorilla collect playing cards, though unclear objectives, confusing object behavior, and stilted gameplay meant that Nintendo considered it a dud. Nintendo Japan tested Sky Skipper with a limited release, and Nintendo of America just never released it commercially.

Instead, NoA repurposed the circuit board so it would run something else. Sky Skipper became Popeye in 1982, and that was seemingly the end of Sky Skipper – or it would have been, except someone uploaded the game’s ROM data to MAME, an open-source arcade emulator, in 2002.

Fast forward to 2015, and Crowley, who developed an interest in Sky Skipper after learning about its history, happened to come across a printed circuit board for the Popeye arcade game at a Swedish auction, one that originally began life as Sky Skipper. The problem was that without a second board to work with, there was no way to reverse engineer Crowley’s board and bring Sky Skipper back to life.

That’s when the next coincidence happened. Crowly and some friends were looking through old arcade warehouses to see if they could dig up any rare finds, and Crowley happened to come across another Popeye board. This one bore the code TNX01, which Crowley said matched the code of the board he bought in Sweden, so he asked an engineer friend, Mark Whiting, to see what he could make of them.

The process involved Whiting deducing the function of every chip on the board and bypassing the security chip meant to prevent people from doing exactly what he was doing. Eventually, he managed to recreate the original board and downloaded the MAME ROM onto it at last.

Crowley worked to recreate the original cabinet next using an old Popeye cabinet for reference, but he had few reference points to help ensure accuracy. Meanwhile, he sold the board from the Swedish auction to American collector Whitney Roberts, who agreed to help with the restoration project. By chance, Roberts met Billy Mitchell, the Donkey Kong champion, at a convention, and Mitchell told him that Nintendo of America still had a functioning Sky Skipper cabinet at their headquarters.

Mitchell put Roberts in contact with NoA executive vice president Don James, and at the end of 2016, Roberts visited Nintendo’s Redmond campus and set eyes on the Sky Skipper cabinet. Roberts took high-quality scans of the cabinet to help Crowley’s restoration project and confirmed that the boards both collectors had were the genuine artifact, so to speak.

As for how Sky Skipper ended up on MAME, that’s yet another coincidence. The Guardian’s Lewis Packwood spoke with Julian Eggebrecht, a developer at Factor 5 and another retro enthusiast. Eggebrecht said that his team was working on Star Wars Rogue Squadron 2: Rogue Leader for the Gamecube, and Nintendo agreed to let him borrow the cabinet if Rogue Squadron 2 was ready for the system’s launch in 2001.

Eggebrecht discovered that one of the chips that controlled the color palette was dead, and he reached out to Genyo Takeda, whom Eggebrecht worked with while developing the Gamecube chip, to see if Takeda, by chance, still had Sky Skipper’s original files. He did, and Eggebrecht managed to fix the machine. Meanwhile, Eggebrecht also downloaded the Sky Skipper ROM, though he told Packwood that he has no idea how it ended up on MAME – in the same year that he and Factor 5 had the cabinet.

However it happened, you can actually play Sky Skipper on Nintendo Switch now. Nintendo packaged it under the Arcade Archives brand and launched it digitally for the handheld platform in 2018.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

Nintendo Switch 2 leaks point to upscaling and ray tracing

Nintendo showed a small handful of developers the new Switch 2 system and demoed some of its graphical abilities, sources say

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Nintendo showed a small handful of developers the new Switch 2 system during Gamescom 2023 and demoed some of its graphical abilities, sources told Eurogamer and a few other publications. While these sources didn’t say when Nintendo plans to launch the supposed new Nintendo Switch console, they did suggest the system is more powerful than some analysts previously suggested.

Eurogamer’s sources said Nintendo showed them a demo reel of the Switch launch game Breath of the Wild running at a higher resolution with smoother framerates. Nintendo often uses Zelda games as tech demos for hardware, and Eurogamer’s sources said there’s no indication Nintendo will re-release the game in some form.

From the sound of it, though, they might not have to. Some developers who reportedly viewed the Switch 2 presentations told Video Games Chronicle that Nintendo’s new console uses Nvidia’s DLSS for upscaling. DLSS is technology that takes a low-resolution image and reproduces it at higher resolutions, and developers can use it to improve performance and visuals even on less powerful hardware.

All current models of the Nintendo Switch have their resolution capped at 720p in handheld mode and 1080p in docked mode – or HD and Full HD, respectively.

VGC’s sources also said that Nintendo showcased The Matrix demo for PS5 and Xbox Series X running on the Switch 2, and it reportedly even had ray tracing features enabled. Ray tracing is an enhanced visual technique that results in more dynamic light effects, though it’s often implemented only on high-end PCs and current-gen game consoles.

Both sets of sources believe Nintendo plans to launch the Switch 2 in late 2024, though it may release earlier.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

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New Switch Online additions include SNES games unreleased in America

Nintendo announced the latest round of Switch Online games is live now, including three that never saw release outside Japan

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Nintendo announced the latest round of Switch Online games is live now, including three SNES games that never saw release outside Japan. Since the new selection of games comes from the SNES library, you don’t need the extra Switch Online Expansion Pack to play them.

First up is Kirby’s Star Stacker, a blocky puzzler that originally launched on Nintendo’s Game Boy, before Nintendo Japan repackaged it for the Super Famicom, Japan’s version of the SNES. It shares more in common with Puyo-Puyo than Tetris, as you battle against Kirby’s enemies or the computer to see who can keep their puzzle field clear the longest. This is the Super Famicom version, and while that edition never released in the States, it’s basically the same as the Game Boy version. 

Quest for Camelot did release in the U.S. as a video game tie-in with Warner Bros. eponymous movie. Camelot is a top-down action-adventure with shades of Zelda games, as you travel around a fantasy kingdom, bonking monsters with your sword, helping folks in need, and doing some light puzzle solving.

Then there’s Joy Mech Fight, a robot fighting game where your feisty little mech saves the world by beating up a bunch of other robots. It’s a bit basic by modern standards, but it comes with multiplayer and a fairly decent roster of playable robots.

Finally is the impressively named Downtown Nekketsu March Super-Awesome Field Day! It’s a popular entry in the Japan-only Kurio Kun series that sees several players compete in a suite of mini-games and feats of athleticism. Think of it as a rudimentary Mario and Sonic at the Olympic Games, only without the actual Olympics. Or… Mario and Sonic.

Speaking of SNES games, Nintendo is gearing up to launch a Super Mario RPG remake in November 2023, so don’t expect to see the original on Switch Online anytime soon.

Written by Josh Broadwell on behalf of GLHF

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