After triumph of Animal Crossing, Nintendo’s pipeline is dry
The runaway success of Nintendo Co Ltd’s island life simulator Animal
Crossing: New Horizons has overshadowed an uncomfortable fact for fans of the Switch console — it lacks upcoming titles.
Nintendo last week said Animal
Crossing, which has become an escapist hit for players locked down by the coronavirus, is one of 27
Switch titles to sell more than a million copies, following games populated with characters such as Italian plumber Mario and sword-wielding fighter Link.
But the Japanese company’s current games slate is marked by an absence of blockbuster names, with Nintendo pointing to updates and expansions to titles already on the market like Super Smash Bros.
Rival Sony has already been forced to announce delays to major titles such as The Last Of Us Part II as the coronavirus impacts production. Nintendo, which is traditionally tightlipped about releases, has refrained from outlining upcoming titles since the start of the outbreak.
“The slate is completely empty,” said Serkan Toto, founder of game industry consultancy Kantan Games. “The Covid-19 situation has increased Nintendo’s conservative stance when it comes to announcing games.”
Nintendo said it saw a decline in software sales to 140 million units in the current financial year, even as
Animal Crossing proved a runaway success, selling more than 13 million units in its first six weeks.
The Switch device’s growing back catalogue includes titles, like Legend
Of Zelda: Breath Of The Wild, with a dedicated fan base and a longer shelf life than games on other systems.
Because users will still buy the Switch to play older games, Nintendo is under less pressure to announce games before they are ready, said Hideki Yasuda, an analyst.
Fans are still waiting for details on hotly anticipated titles such as the sequel to Breath Of The Wild, which was again categorised as “To-Be-Announced” in filings last week.
Many consumers are also unable to find Switch hardware itself, with Nintendo’s lean supply chain stretched further by the coronavirus outbreak. CEO Shuntaro Furukawa said he sees disruption easing by the summer.
Some 85% of fourth-quarter software sales were titles developed by Nintendo. The sales momentum serves as a response to critics who point to the threat from entrants such as Google and Apple.
Rather, gamers who want to hoover up ghosts in Luigi’s Mansion or engage in an inky turf war in Splatoon must buy a Nintendo system.