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Nintendo Switch games to lose online functionality unless you pay for a new service

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nintendo switchGetty Images/Michael Kovac

  • Starting Tuesday, September 18, Nintendo’s Switch
    console will require users to pay for its online service in
    order to play games online.
  • The service, named “Nintendo Switch Online,” costs $20
    per year.
  • In addition to enabling online co-operative and
    competitive play, Nintendo Switch Online offers access to a
    growing library of classic Nintendo games.

If you’re one of the over 20 million Nintendo Switch owners, take
note: Nintendo’s about to lock online play behind a membership
paywall.

Starting on Tuesday, September 18, Nintendo is launching
“Nintendo Switch Online” on the Nintendo Switch. The service
costs $20/year, and primarily offers access to online gameplay —
the kind of online gameplay you’ve already been enjoying for free
on Nintendo’s consoles for years.

Since the Nintendo Switch launched in March 2017, playing games
online has been free. Games like “Mario Kart 8 Deluxe,” “Splatoon
2,” and “ARMS” that all launched in the first six months of the
Switch’s life — games that are primarily played online — will all
require the $20/year service to be played online.

Nintendo’s upcoming “Super Smash Bros. Ultimate,” arguably the
biggest game Nintendo is launching this year on the Switch, will
also require Nintendo Switch Online in order to be played online.

There’s one notable exception in “Fortnite,” which
won’t require a paid account
to be played online, but few
games are exempt: Hit third-party games like “Minecraft” and
“Rocket League” will both require the service if you’re playing
online (even co-operative online play in “Minecraft”).


Nintendo Switch OnlineNintendo

For $20/year, Nintendo’s offering a handful of other benefits
with Nintendo Switch Online. 

As Mario demonstrates above, the service consists of five primary
components:

  1. Online multiplayer, both co-operative and competitive.
  2. A classic game library, starting with 20 Nintendo
    Entertainment System games.
  3. Cloud save support for “compatible games.”
  4. A smartphone app that provides voice chat support for online
    multiplayer.
  5. “Exclusive special offers,” starting with the ability to
    purchase wireless NES-style gamepads for the Switch.

The service is similar to those offered by Sony and Microsoft on
the PlayStation 4 and Xbox One — PlayStation Plus and Xbox Live
Gold, respectively.

Those services also offer access to online gameplay, provide a
growing library of free games, and enable cloud saves.


Nintendo Switch (cloud saves)Nintendo

On paper, Nintendo Switch Online is nearly identical to Xbox Live
Gold and PlayStation Plus. In reality, Nintendo Switch Online is
actually much better than both Sony and Microsoft’s offerings in
one key way: Price.

At $20/year, Nintendo Switch Online is by far the least expensive
online subscription service for a game console; PlayStation Plus
and Xbox Live Gold cost $60/year each.

But there’s a crucial difference between what Sony/Microsoft
offer and what Nintendo is offering: Far larger
libraries of free games. Both Xbox Live Gold and PlayStation Plus
offer free games each month, and we’re not talking about games
that came out 30 years ago or more. Games like “Destiny 2” and
“Rocket League,” among many other blockbusters, have shown up on
both rival services. 

In so many words, $60/year is a lot to pay for an online service,
but both PlayStation Plus and Xbox Live Gold pay for themselves
in the first few months through free games.

In the case of Nintendo Switch Online, the free games included
are from the Nintendo Entertainment System — Nintendo’s first
major video game console, which played games like the original
“Super Mario Bros” and the original “The Legend of Zelda.”

They’re being updated with online multiplayer, and can be played
on Nintendo’s latest hardware, but these are otherwise the same
classic games you’ve played many times before on previous
Nintendo consoles.


Nintendo Switch Online (NES games)Nintendo

Here are the first 10 games: “Super Mario Bros. 3,” “Dr.
Mario,” “Balloon Fight,” “Donkey Kong,” “Ice Climber,” “The
Legend of Zelda,” “Mario Bros.,” “Soccer,” “Super Mario Bros.”
and “Tennis.”

Nintendo says that 20 classic games will become available for
download when the service lights up on September 18, and a
recent
video Nintendo published
hints at what those other 10 initial
games might be: “NES Open Tournament Golf,” “Solomon’s Key,”
“Double Dragon,” “Excitebike,” “Ghosts and Goblins,” “Super Dodge
Ball,” “Baseball,” “Pro Wrestling,” “Gradius,” and “River City
Ransom” all make brief appearances.

Additionally, “Tecmo Bowl” and “Yoshi” have appeared in
promotional images — a hint at what’s to come, perhaps.

Nintendo Switch Online goes live on September 18, and will
require a system update to version 6.0.0. Whether you download
the update or not, games like “Mario Kart 8 Deluxe” will stop
working online without a Nintendo Switch Online paid account as
of this Tuesday.

You can watch an overview trailer of Nintendo Switch Online
below:

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