Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Why Is Nintendo Obsessed With Remakes?

The Nintendo Direct for June concluded on Tuesday morning with confirmation of a game that had already been leaked and has been talked about for a long time now.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time is coming to Switch 2 in 2026, and it's being fully remade for the newest hardware. This was too be expected, but it was a little disappointing to see that it was the only mega-release on the calendar for the rest of the year.

Star Fox, which is a remake of the Nintendo 64 classic Star Fox 64, also was talked about a little more as the June 25 release date gets ever closer.

Having two of the biggest games of the conference be remakes of '90s games will do good for the nostalgic gamers, but is Nintendo trying too hard to go into the time machine and relive the past instead of forging forward with something novel?

Remember, the Switch did so well because Nintendo was at its most experimental. The release of Breath of the Wild and Super Mario Odyssey both did wonders for the company's reputation and revitalized the industry and the genres of the game franchises they were apart of.

It almost feels like Nintendo is playing the Switch 2 much safer than the Switch because they already got a whole new group of fans invested in their games. This could be a good idea, but it could also result in a stale pale over the biggest characters in their history.

Ocarina of Time is arguably the best game ever, and Tears of the Kingdom came out just three years ago. We don't necessarily need a new game in the franchise at this time, but when there's nothing else coming out, pretending that a three-decade old game is the headliner for the entire year is a stretch.

People want a reason to buy a Switch 2. Making brilliant new games, such as Donkey Kong Bananza and Yoshi and the Mysterious Book, is a much better strategy.



from Men's Journal https://ift.tt/SxUFBjp

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