Nintendo Switch 2 is officially coming to stores on June 5. In just over two months, you might have the opportunity to own Nintendo’s newest (and most expensive) console and play the latest Switch 2 exclusives (Mario Kart World looks ridiculously fun), assuming you can snag one of them.
Because if you want to boot up a Switch 2 on launch day, you’ll almost certainly need to preorder it. Unless you’re lucky enough to find a store that has extra consoles in stock, or there turns out to be exceptionally low demand (unlikely given eight years of building anticipation among the Nintendo faithful), these things are going to be a rare commodity.
One option, of course, is to preorder a system directly through Nintendo—but the company’s requirements to do so are anything but orthodox.
How to “register your interest” for a Switch 2
Nintendo doesn’t consider theirs a “preorder” program, per se. Instead, the company invites you to “register your interest” in buying a Switch 2. Assuming you’re at least 18 years old, you’ll need to head to Nintendo’s official interest registration site, then sign into your Nintendo Account. Once Nintendo has confirmed your eligibility, it will send an invitation to the email address registered with your Nintendo Account. This invitation gives you the option to buy one Switch 2 console—either the standalone unit or the bundle with a digital copy of Mario Kart World. This invite will be good for 72 hours. Easy enough, right?
It’s not that simple.
Only experienced gamers need apply
This is a first come, first served program, so the sooner you are able to register, the better your chance of being selected. On top of that, this…let’s call it a “purchasing opportunity” is only open to registrants who have a Nintendo Switch Online subscription with at least 12 months of paid service.
But the requirement that seems most out of left field to me is this: You also need to have at least 50 hours of gameplay associated with the Nintendo Account you use to register, as of April 2, 2025. If you don’t meet any of these criteria, you’ll be put on an overflow list. Nintendo will only start sending invites to members of this waitlist once the registrants who meet the requirements have all been invited.
Fifty hours of gameplay is a bizarre requirement (can’t I just give you money, Nintendo?) but you can see the company’s reasoning. As a mega-hyped piece of hardware, the Switch 2 is a prime target for scalpers. By setting strict requirements for who can register for an invitation to purchase one (and by limiting each registration to one console purchase) Nintendo is trying to ensure that only true Nintendo fans get first crack. Scalpers won’t even be able to make multiple Nintendo Accounts in order to get around these limits, as the aforementioned 50 hours of gameplay had to be logged before today, April 2. Unless scalpers knew the rules well ahead of time, any dummy accounts they make leading up to the Switch 2 launch will be useless.
Even as someone with well over 50 hours of gameplay on my Nintendo Account, this all feels a bit weird. Perhaps its the data privacy geek in me, but it doesn’t sit well with me that I need to share my gameplay with Nintendo in order to prove that I am, indeed, worthy of buying a Switch 2. Tie the purchase to my Nintendo Account, fine, but I’m not sure I like the precedent here.
What do you think so far?