The Nintendo Switch stands out from other gaming console rivals such as the Xbox Series X and the PlayStation 5. With its hybrid form, it can be used as a main console and as a handheld device. As such, its best games feel equally at home on the big screen and while travelling.
Whether you have the original Nintendo Switch, the cheaper but portable-only Switch Lite, or the upgraded Switch OLED there’s plenty to keep you busy. Franchise favourites like Mario or The Legend of Zelda obviously appear, but deeper cuts include Splatoon 3 or the strangely captivating exercise game Ring Fit Adventure.
So without further ado, here are the Switch games we love so far. You can also read up on everything we know about the Switch 2.
Best Nintendo Switch games 2024
1. The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild – The Switch's Best Game

Originally set to come out on the Wii U, The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild was not only a Switch launch title, but also the system’s flagship game. It’s a sprawling open-world adventure that’s undeniably the biggest Zelda title yet.
New additions to the series include loot drops, crafting, and cooking, while the expansive overworld stretches as far as you can see. The lush cel-shaded graphics feel like a natural evolution from the Wii’s Skyward Sword, while the audio boasts another franchise first: voice acting.
This is the best launch title on any console in years, and feels era-defining, reshaping what we expect from open-world games.
It’s since been followed up by Tears of the Kingdom, a sprawling sequel that takes everything Breath of the Wild does and makes it just a little bigger. If you’ve not played either, start with Breath of the Wild, then jump into Kingdom after if you still want more.
2. Super Mario Odyssey – Best Platformer

Super Mario Odyssey is easily one of the best Mario games in a decade and Nintendo has crafted a game full of fun and surprises.
It’s a beautiful balancing act of classic gameplay and new features that makes Odyssey feel fresh but familiar. Cappy – Mario’s now-sentient cap that allows you to take control of other creatures – could have been a shark-jumping moment, but is actually a stroke of genius. Super Mario Odyssey is a must for Switch owners, young and old, and will no doubt go down as a classic.
3. Mario Kart 8: Deluxe – Best Multiplayer Game

One of the best games for the Switch was actually already one of the best games on the Wii U. Mario Kart 8 was the best entry in the racing series in years, and this version is even better.
There are a few new additions to justify the re-purchase: courses and new characters from Splatoon and elsewhere, the return of Battle Mode, all of the original game’s DLC, and eight-player local multiplayer. There are also a few new items and the ability to carry two items at once.
It’s not a major update, and it might be tricky for anyone who already has Mario Kart 8 on the Wii U to justify the upgrade – but if you missed it the first time, this is a great way to get your hands on a brilliant game.
4. Ring Fit Adventure – Exercise While You Play

Who said exercise couldn’t be fun?
This surprisingly elaborate RPG genuinely turns working out into a game in its own right. You’ll work through a range of worlds by jogging on the spot before jumping into turn-based battles against a range of enemies, where your attacks are your workouts, using mountain climbers and shoulder presses to wipe the floor with your enemies.
Plenty of progression, loads of re-playability, and mini-games to break it all up help make this the best game to work out to, bar none.
5. Super Smash Bros. Ultimate – Best Fighting Game

‘Ultimate’ is undoubtedly the word. Just about everything that every Smash game has ever offered is here once again in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, with more characters, stages, modes, and hidden references than anyone will have the time to fully process.
Every fighter and stage from all the previous entries are back, joined by plenty of new faces, and extensive new singleplayer, and a whole new Spirit mechanic that adds RPG stats and buffs as an extra layer of complexity on top of it all.
If Smash Bros. Ultimate has a fault, it’s the same as its strength: there’s just so much here that it’s impossible for anyone to take in, and in the early hours especially it’s an overwhelming experience, with little work done to guide new players in. Maybe even Smash needs a little more editorial oversight than this, but at least you can’t ever accuse Nintendo of shortchanging its fans.
6. Metroid Dread – Stellar Single-Player

The first proper new 2D, mainline Metroid game since Metroid Fusion on the GBA in 2002, to call Metroid Dread ‘long-awaited’ would be a bit of an understatement.
Picking up where Fusion left off, this game wraps up the core Samus story, and along the way answers a few lingering questions about Metroid, the X Parasite, and the mysterious Chozo race – though leaves just as many unanswered.
More importantly, it’s a phenomenally good game. The classic Metroid exploration and combat are back, but bolstered by new stealth-horror sections where you must evade the detection of the E.M.M.I. robots that are hunting your bounty hunter across the planet ZDR.
Oozing in atmosphere and packed with secrets, this is one of the Switch’s best single-player titles – and a fine way to cap off one of Nintendo’s best and most beloved series.
7. Splatoon 3 – Best Multiplayer Shooter

Splatoon was one of the surprise hits for the Wii U, and a welcome reminder that for all of its reliance on big hitters like Zelda and Mario, Nintendo is still capable of creating brilliant original games when it wants to. Splatoon 2 launched early in the Switch’s life, bringing new modes and extra features. Splatoon 3 is a subtle upgrade, but one that adds extra polish, depth, and another great single-player campaign.
Nintendo’s take on the online multiplayer shooter is very… Nintendo. That means quirky character design, a fun setting, and a brilliant new twist on tired shooter mechanics. Instead of shooting bullets, you fire ink, which can hurt your foes, but more importantly covers the arena. The team with the most ink wins, but it also gives you advantages like faster travel and refilling your ammo as you go.
The third generation includes additional competitive multiplayer modes, an improved take on the brilliant Salmon Run co-op horde mode, and even a built-in digital card game that’s unexpectedly deep.
8. Hades – Best Indie Game

Hades isn’t exclusive to the Switch, but thanks to the console’s portability this is arguably the best place to play the 2020 indie darling.
A roguelike for people who don’t like roguelikes (including myself), Hades lets you step into the sandals of the lesser-known Greek god Zagreus as you fight to escape the titular underworld and reunite with your long-lost mother in the mortal realm.
You’ll find yourself attempting to escape again, and again, and again, but each randomised run feels different thanks to impressive variety in the enemies, environments, weapons, and upgrades you can pick up.
Even more remarkable is how well written and voice-acted the game is, with enough material that you’ll rarely (if ever) encounter repeats, interwoven into a carefully assembled story that develops slowly as you hurl yourself into the undead meat-grinder again and again.
9. Mario + Rabbids: Sparks of Hope – Best Strategy Game

The first Mario + Rabbids was a surprise success, an XCOM-style turn-based tactics hit that did the unthinkable – handing Mario a gun – and somehow made it work.
Sparks of Hope is a smart step forward, and more ambitious than it needs to be. The core combat has been refined by ditching the grid to allow free reign movement that’s a more natural fit for the Mushroom Kingdom, while a new planet-based overworld campaign is packed with nods to the Mario Galaxy games.
A gentle ramp-up eventually leads to some pretty devilish tactics as the game goes on, while Ubisoft’s Rabbids antics are enough to keep you smiling even at the game’s trickiest.
10. Animal Crossing: New Horizons – A Meditative Experience

Animal Crossing: New Horizons will take its place as one of the Nintendo Switch staples, with its gentle pace, positive gameplay and beautiful surroundings.
The desert island offers players the chance to build something literally from nothing, and go at whatever speed they feel comfortable with. The new rewards system – Nook Miles – also encourages you to get involved in all aspects that the game offers.
The multiplayer gameplay is a bit of a faff, and having cloud saves wouldn’t go amiss. Nonetheless, this is still an addictive title that will keep you hooked for months to come.
11. The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom – Best 2D Zelda

If you adored the remake of Link’s Awakening on the Switch, or you simply want a slightly cosier game than Breath of the Wild, then the latest game in The Legend of Zelda series, Echoes of Wisdom, fits the bill perfectly.
Rather than playing as the sword-wielding Link, you take the reigns as Zelda, who must rescue the hero, plus the rest of Hyrule. The Princess fights her enemies using Tears of the Kingdom style mechanics, with the help of a mysterious (and adorable) being called Tri. Tri allows Zelda to make copies of the things around her, from old beds to creepy crawly enemies.
This style of play gives you endless ways to solve puzzles, many of which can be found in a staple of Zelda games missing from the new 3D titles: dungeons. Despite its cutesy, chibi nature, there’s still plenty of lore to get stuck in with, and the world is as gorgeous and lush as ever to explore.
Echoes of Wisdom strikes the perfect balance between classic Zelda and the clever style of the 3D games, making it one of the strongest releases on the Switch in 2024. It may not be as sprawling or groundbreaking as Breath of the Wild, but rest assured you’ll find hours of fun with it.
12. Metroid Prime Remastered – Best Solo Shooter

Metroid Prime Remastered is the perfect Switch release for anyone nostalgic for the brilliant GameCube shooter, the first game to transpose bounty hunter Samus Aran into three dimensions. Conveniently, it’s also the perfect Switch release for anyone who never played Prime first time around. Basically: you should play this game.
The first in an eventual trilogy (with a fourth much-delayed but still officially on the way), Metroid Prime reinvented the long-running Nintendo series from 2D side-scroller into a first-person shooter. This is no Call of Duty though – there’s action involved, but the bigger focus is on exploration, puzzle solving, and scanning the environment and enemies to learn more about the planet of Tallon IV.
This remaster was handled partly by original developer Retro Studios, and keeps the core gameplay intact while recreating the visuals from top to bottom. Updated two-stick and optional motion controls help it feel like a whole new game, meaning it can both survive your rose-tinted glasses and feel just as fresh to someone playing Prime for the first time.
13. Super Mario Bros. Wonder – Multiplayer Mario

Super Mario Bros. Wonder is an effortlessly charming 2D Mario title that allows up to four players to get in on all the fun. The hidden Wonder Seeds in levels completely transform the game with chase sequences, musical elements and even a complete camera-shift to a birds-eye view style of play.
The new Elephant power-up allows you to explore levels in new ways. You can hold water in your trunk and spray it at enemies or blocks, and smash your way through levels with your sheer size. There are other fun power-ups on offer, too.
There are also hidden secrets in each hub world which are bound to put a smile on your face. Plus, whilst most levels are easy enough for kids to tackle, some of the stages are arguably the most challenging on a Mario title, full stop. This game is simply wonderful.
14. Paper Mario: The Origami King – Funniest Switch Game

The latest in the long-running Paper Mario series, The Origami King is familiar enough on the surface: a simplified Mario-themed RPG with a deeply silly sense of humour.
There have been bigger tweaks of course. The Switch’s horsepower allows for perhaps the prettiest Paper Mario yet, and the new circular combat system is a joy. Every fight is a mini puzzle in its own right as you work to re-arrange enemies to optimise your attack, adding enough dynamism and head-scratching to paper over the well-worn turn-based formula.
Like any Paper Mario game, comedy is front and centre in the script, and this is probably the funniest game you’ll find on the Switch. And with hours of gameplay to get through – even without trying to delve into the many collectables – this one will keep you busy for a while.
The 2024 remake of The Thousand Year Door is another hilarious Mario title for the Switch.
15. Luigi’s Mansion 3 – Ghoulishy Great Fun

Luigi’s Mansion 3 is a slick reminder that Luigi remains Nintendo’s most wasted asset (sorry Waluigi fans), and he and the ghosts are as charming and characterful as anything in a mainline Mario game.
Once again you’re tasked with exploring a giant haunted building (though technically it’s a hotel this time around, not a mansion) with just a flashlight and a vacuum cleaner to capture your spectral foes.
You’ve got help though: Gooigi, a cross between the T-1000 and Flubber you can use to access otherwise inaccessible areas, solve puzzles, or even team up with in the new co-op mode. Plus multiplayer mayhem ScareScraper returns, along with three slight but fun competitive local multiplayer mini-games for up to 8 players.
Despite a few wobbles the mix of action and puzzles delivers too, and the only thing the game really needs is an editor: surely the 17 floors here could have been condensed down to lucky number 13?
16. Pokémon Legends: Arceus – Best Pokémon Game

Pokémon Legends: Arceus brings the Pokémon franchise into a whole new age with a semi open-world, slick game mechanics, a detailed plot, and a focus on building the Pokédex and exploring the region, rather than the classic gym battles.
Each part of the Hisui region serves as its own open-world section, from rolling hills and lush fields to boggy swamps and volcanic islands, there is plenty of variety. However, the graphics could do with more polish. The presentation feels unrefined and pixelated at times, and some textures and Pokémon appear janky.
Nonetheless, the graphics do not detract from the fact that this is the most refreshing take we have seen on a Pokémon story in years, with plenty of adventure and some challenging battles that make for a compelling experience.
It has the edge over the latest main line instalment, Pokémon Scarlet and Violet. Whilst this game operates with a truly open world with three distinct stories to follow and more traditional gameplay than Arceus, it is full of bugs and generally feels unfinished.
It is a shame, as the gameplay of the Gen 9 series is incredibly fun – and had more time and care gone into the development process, it would have surely been one of the best titles to date.
17. Kirby and the Forgotten Land – Best Switch Game for Kids

Kirby and the Forgotten Land takes Nintendo’s cutest pink blob and brings him into the world of 3D, with sprawling overgrown stages to explore and numerous bizarre enemies to defeat.
The most enjoyable parts of this game are the unusual power-ups, which can be upgraded throughout playtime. With the dubiously named ‘Mouthful Mode’, Kirby can swallow and take the shape of objects such as cars, stairs, and vending machines – to name a few.
The game includes a co-op mode where secondary players can take on the role of Bandana Waddle Dee. Whilst the abilities of this character aren’t quite as dynamic as Kirby’s, it’s still a fun way to explore a level and help complete tasks that unlock new areas of the hub world – ideal for younger kids who want to take part.
This game doesn’t offer a real challenge. Even on the harder difficulty mode, bosses can be bypassed with a lot of button smashing. However, if you want a light-hearted platformer that looks slick, offers plenty of goofy charm, and numerous stages and mini-games, then Kirby and the Forgotten Land is the Switch title for you.
18. Arms – Punchy Fun

Arms is a slightly odd cross between a boxing game and a shooter. The core gameplay is essentially boxing, but with a major twist: your arms are extendable.
Using the Joy-Con motion controls you can punch, block, grab, and dodge, as well as use a powered-up super attack. If you’re not a fan of flailing, you can also use buttons, either on a pair of Joy-Cons, one on its own, or using the Switch Pro Controller.
There are ten colourful characters, ranging from an Egyptian mummy to a sentient green blob, and each comes with three different types of weaponised arms meaning there’s plenty of variety in abilities and fighting styles from launch, with Nintendo planning to add even more as free DLC.
The single-player content is pretty light but multiplayer is where Arms really shines, with Nintendo proving once again that it can take a longstanding genre and find a way to shake it up.
19. Princess Peach: Showtime! – Unique Mario spin-off

After years of waiting, Mario fans have finally been treated to a Switch spin-off starring the leading lady of the franchise, Princess Peach.
Set in the backdrop of a theatre setting, Peach must face the evil villain Madame Grape and her minions by adopting new personas in her own series of epic action plays. This includes a swordsman, a ninja, a cowgirl and even a chef.
The gameplay is simpler than some Mario titles, but that is fine as this is geared towards younger audiences, who’ll very much enjoy the charming cutscenes and array of customisable outfits.
We can only hope that this is just the start of many future Peach games.
20. Nintendo Switch Sports – Best Mini-Games

The most surprising thing about Switch Sports is that it took so long to come out. After all, Wii Sports was one of the most popular games ever made, and the Switch’s controls lend naturally to a follow-up.
With that in mind, this feels familiar. Bowling and Tennis in particular have been lifted almost directly from the Wii game, but they’re joined by four new activities: volleyball, football, badminton, and chambara (essentially fencing).
The newer games tend to add a little more complexity, though really it’s the simple classics that hit the spot best.
Throw in both local and online multiplayer, and unlockable outfits to customise your avatar, and there’s enough here to make this worthwhile – especially at the game’s cheaper price.
Note that the physical edition comes with the leg strap also found in Ring Fit Adventure – an optional extra for the football mode, but not required at all.