San Francisco Chronicle

Nintendo teams with venture fund on Switch play

- By Selina Wang and Yuji Nakamura

Nintendo is teaming up with San Francisco’s Scrum Ventures to scout startups working on new ways to play or use the Japanese company’s hit gaming console, the Switch.

The program, run by Scrum, will look for startups, teams within larger companies or university researcher­s developing new tools to improve the Nintendo Switch platform, including components, sensors, chips or other add-ons, the venture capital firm said. Scrum and Nintendo will provide developers with assistance to bring products to the market. Neither company plans to invest directly in the startups.

The move is a departure from Nintendo’s usual approach of working with establishe­d hardware suppliers and some of the newcomers may be able to release products under the Nintendo brand. The Japanese company is seeking creative ideas that may lead to new gaming experience­s for the Switch and help the device maintain strong sales momentum. Released a little more than a year ago, the console has ignited a turnaround at the company, which has seen its share price almost double.

The Switch, which retails for about $300, is essentiall­y a tablet that can be hooked up to a television or played on the go. It comes with two detachable controller­s that are packed with numerous sensors, including infrared cameras and sophistica­ted vibration engines. Nintendo’s previous console, the Wii U, fell far behind rival products from

and Microsoft, but the Switch’s hybrid approach aptly predicted that gamers were looking for a new kind of device.

Scrum, an early-stage venture capital firm, said it will choose teams to work with before they pitch their ideas to Nintendo in the fall. The VC firm said proposals for software titles won’t be considered. Scrum has strong ties to Japan. Last month it unveiled a joint venture with Panasonic to identify technologi­es within the company that could be spun out into startups.

“We are always exploring ways to evolve entertainm­ent,” Ko Shiota, a senior executive officer at Nintendo, said in a statement. “We look forward to discoverin­g unique technologi­es that add to the Nintendo Switch experience­s through the program managed by Scrum Ventures.”

By tapping outside developers, Nintendo’s unusual approach demSony onstrates it is focused on experiment­ation. Investors have rewarded the company for off-thewall ideas. Shares rose early this year after Nintendo introduced cardboard accessorie­s that work with the Switch. The cardboard sheets can be folded over the system’s detachable controller­s, which have sensors to detect movement, creating toy motorbike handles, a fishing rod or miniature piano.

In February, the company increased its forecast for Switch console sales in the current quarter to 15 million, up from its original estimate of 10 million. Nintendo President Tatsumi Kimishima said he wants to sell about 37 million by the end of March 2019 and said Switch sales are so far roughly on pace with the Wii, its best-selling home console in history.

 ?? Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle 2017 ?? Haylie Ferreira, 18, tests the Nintendo Switch, the hybrid video game console, during a preview last year in San Francisco.
Gabrielle Lurie / The Chronicle 2017 Haylie Ferreira, 18, tests the Nintendo Switch, the hybrid video game console, during a preview last year in San Francisco.

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