Commentary: If you don’t understand Nintendo Switch 2, you won’t understand the modern world

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LONDON: The release of the Nintendo Switch 2 (the imaginatively titled follow-up to 2017’s games console of the same name) is a big deal in a lot of ways. Its record-breaking sales are an endorsement of Nintendo’s insight, embodied in the original Switch, that the days in which ever-fancier cutting-edge hardware was the way to win the “console wars” are over.

Nintendo’s rivals, Sony and Microsoft, have long pushed the limits of what designing more and more powerful systems will do to attract customers. And both now appear to have reached them and face a race to catch up.

The Nintendo Switch 2’s success is an important moment in the life of the games industry. But more significantly, it is an important moment in the cultural and political life of the planet. Gaming enjoys a curious place in global culture.

On the one hand, it is economically dominant, the biggest and most influential of all the cultural pastimes. On the other, it is continually treated and spoken about as if it were a passing fad. Even some people who do it every day are in denial about it – almost daily on social media I will see someone who sneers at video games while devouring the output of the New York Times’ games section. 

AN ENDURING PASSION FOR GAMING

Look at history, and you will see that our passion for gaming, in one form or another, is as old and enduring as our fondness for gold. I would put my money on almost every passion in the modern world coming to an end before I would bet on us no longer making time for a game. 

But too many people in business, and especially in politics, still treat gaming as something to be dismissed or ignored. Sometimes, gaming’s defenders start talking about the pinnacles of the genre, the titles that say deep and profound things about the human condition.

But the reason we ignore gaming at our peril isn’t because Suzerain, say, teach...

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