The news: Nintendo reported blockbuster financial performance for its most recent quarterly earnings, with revenues surging over 90% YoY and profits rising more than 270%, per CNBC.
This growth is largely driven by the successful launch of its Switch 2 flagship console, which debuted in June and had already sold over 10 million units globally by September 30. Nintendo’s captive audience opens opportunities for creative brand engagement.
Why it’s worth watching: Nintendo’s dominance of the handheld console space has shifted competitor strategies. Microsoft responded with its own ROG Xbox Ally X handheld in September, and PC makers Lenovo, MSI, and Valve have also released various generations of handheld consoles to compete with the original Switch.
But beyond hardware, the Switch 2’s success has centered mostly around first-party game titles:
- 9.57 million units of Mario Kart World have sold to date, mostly bundled with Switch 2 launch-day hardware. Nearly 3.5 million units of Donkey Kong Bananza and 1.16 million units of Super Mario Party Jamboree have also sold.
- Altogether, Switch 2 game software sales have reached 20.62 million units, per Polygon. And demand for Switch 2 hardware and game sales is expected to surge heading into the holiday season.
Ecosystem advantage: Nintendo’s success stems from its ecosystem control. Backward compatibility keeps longtime users buying new hardware, while blockbuster first-party titles drive recurring engagement.
Unlike rivals that rely on third-party game ecosystems, Nintendo owns the customer experience from device to content, giving it unparalleled pricing power and brand loyalty across generations of users. Here are its platform advantages:
- Switch 2 bundles tie software directly to hardware adoption.
- Legacy Switch owners can upgrade seamlessly thanks to compatible titles.
- Franchise-driven marketing (Mario, Donkey Kong, Zelda) sustains multigenerational reach that transcends to films, theme parks, retail stores, and merchandising.
This closed ecosystem allows Nintendo to capture lifetime value from players rather than one-off transactions—a model increasingly rare in today’s fragmented gaming market. This provides high-value audiences for marketers willing to work with Nintendo’s ecosystem.
Brand opportunities: As gaming consumption shifts to handheld and hybrid devices, brands should explore partnerships and placements that align with Nintendo’s highly curated experiences rather than disrupt it.
Because Switch 2 and its games are ad-free, brands can engage players through co-branded campaigns, limited-edition content, and cross-platform tie-ins on Twitch, Discord, YouTube, and social media.