A family of popular portable game consoles from Nintendo. Since its inception in 2017, more than 150 million units have been sold. Superseding the Nintendo DS, the device was named Switch because it can be switched into handheld, tabletop and TV modes. The controllers on each side of the screen are detachable and clip together to be more like a desktop game controller. See
Nintendo DS.
When using a TV as the screen, the Switch competes with Xbox and PlayStation consoles but with the advantage of portability. However, Switch models tend to appeal to a very broad audience, not just diehard gamers.
Switch Lite and Switch OLED
In 2019, the Switch Lite debuted as a handheld-only version but retained the Switch branding. In 2021, Nintendo released the Switch with an OLED screen along with a sturdier kickstand to keep the unit more stationary in tabletop mode.
Switch 2
Debuting in 2025, Nintendo sold more than three million Switch 2 units in four days. Originally called the Switch Pro, the Switch 2 is slightly larger and heavier and costs half again as much as the Switch ($450 vs. $300). It has a better controller, sharper graphics and higher resolution (4K @ 60 fps, 2K @ 120 fps). See
video game console,
Xbox and
PlayStation.
The Multipurpose Switch
This is the original Switch in handheld mode (bottom). For tabletop mode using the Switch screen and TV mode using a TV screen, the game controllers detach (top). (Images courtesy of Nintendo.)
Switch Year Screen Detachable Internal
Model Intro Size Controller Storage
Switch 2017 6.2" Yes 32GB
Lite 2019 5.5" NO 32GB
OLED 2021 7" Yes 64GB
2 2025 7.9" Yes 256GB