Skip to main content

The Nintendo Switch 2 needs this one feature to make it my favorite console ever

Like every Nintendo enthusiast, I’ve had a long time to reflect on what I want from the Switch 2 . It’s been a long eight years to get to Wednesday’s grand unveiling, so I’ve built up a wish list of features I’m hoping the console has at this point. Some of those are obvious ones that I’ve been clamoring for ever since the original Switch launched in 2017. Naturally I hope to see a more powerful system capable of outputting video in 4K. Don’t we all?

But as April 2 approaches and I once again turn over my hopes in my head, there’s one feature I find myself wishing for more than anything: streaming apps. You know, those apps like Netflix that are — against all odds and logic — largely still not available on the Nintendo Switch? Yeah, those.

I’ve lived with the Nintendo Switch so long that I’d admittedly forgotten that the concept of streaming apps on a Nintendo device was even a possibility. Sure, you can access apps like Hulu and Crunchyroll on Switch, but the idea of Disney+ or Max coming to the system has long felt like a distant pipe dream. The thought of the Switch 2 being a chance to resolve that hadn’t even come to mind until last week. Now that it has, it might be the single system feature I hope to see most on Wednesday.

The Switch’s lack of streaming apps has long felt like a glaring omission from what’s otherwise a near-perfect video game system. On a basic level, apps have become fundamental to just about every piece of tech that requires a screen to use. Your phone has them. Your tablet has them. Your TV has them. Your PS5 and Xbox Series X have them. The Nintendo Switch was already a weird exception to the rule in 2017, so a new device missing them in 2025 would feel downright defiant at this point.

The Hulu app appears on a screen behind the Nintendo Switch
Hulu

What’s doubly strange is that the Switch feels like the ideal device for apps like Netflix . The system’s portability makes it a perfect travel companion, and that’s exactly when you might need a good way to access movies and TV easily. I’d much rather load up Peacock on my Switch screen when I’m away from home than watching it on my smaller phone display. And considering that the Switch 2 appears to have a notably larger display than its predecessor, that’s even more reason to make it a more flexible media center. There isn’t much that I feel could improve the Switch 2 beyond tech upgrades, but this is one small feature that could go a long way towards making the Switch feel like a perfect version of itself.

Look, I won’t be heartbroken if Nintendo doesn’t announce that the Netflix app is on Switch 2. It won’t stop me from buying it and I’m sure I’d only grumble about it for a few months before forgetting entirely, just as I did with the Switch. But this is one of those small features that will tell us a lot about Nintendo’s willingness to modernize this generation, something it’s always had a slippery relationship with. Nintendo is known for zigging when everyone else zags, which is how it has innovated with its consoles time and time again. It’s also what has made it an incredibly frustrating hardware manufacturer, as it can stick to its guns on features like outdated online services or cumbersome voice chat integration. If Nintendo remains headstrong on apps, it might be a sign that the Switch 2 generation won’t come with an attitude adjustment.

Maybe it’s just wishful thinking, but I do expect this to be one small way in which Nintendo catches up with the times for the Switch 2. It no longer has the advantage of being the only thing like it on the market, as it did in 2017. With competitors like the Steam Deck out in the wild, the Switch 2 will need to deliver what’s expected of a modern handheld — Netflix and all. If Nintendo can pull those small, but easy to miss, feats off, the Switch 2 has the potential to be one of the best video game consoles of all time on day one. Don’t leave us hanging for another eight years.

Giovanni Colantonio
As Digital Trends' Senior Gaming Editor, Giovanni Colantonio oversees all things video games at Digital Trends. As a veteran…
The Switch 2’s biggest game changer for old titles isn’t its performance boost
Link fights a Zonai in The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom Switch 2 Edition.

With the release of the Nintendo Switch 2, I was initially focused on playing all the new Switch 2 launch games. Mario Kart World dominated my first day with the device, but I already had a list of original Switch games I wanted to return to on the newer hardware to see how they benefited from the improved hardware. Aside from the games with bespoke Switch 2 Editions, I was curious to see how big a difference the experience would be for these older games with improved stability and maybe a bit of a visual bump.

As impressed as I was with how much better nearly all my old titles ran on the Switch 2, it is an accessibility option absent from the Switch that turned out to be the biggest game changer.

Read more
Watch the Switch 2 do something unexpected in this intense bend test
The Switch 2 undergoing a durability test.

Zack Nelson of the popular JerryRigEverything YouTube channel is more used to putting smartphones through his demanding durability test, but he clearly couldn’t resist doing the same with Nintendo’s just-released Switch 2 handheld to find out if it’s a “pass” or “fail” when it comes to hardiness.

“Out of the millions of Switches made, you kinda gotta feel sorry for the one that ends up on my desk,” Nelson says at the start of his video, suggesting that the device is in for a pretty rough time.

Read more
PSA: Don’t fall for Nintendo Switch 2 horror story hoaxes this weekend
The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom runs on a Switch 2 screen.

The Nintendo Switch 2 is out today and that's a cause for celebration. Players who were able to score one will no doubt spend the day racing in Mario Kart World, testing out their Joy-con's new tricks in Nintendo Switch 2 Welcome Tour, and testing out new features like GameChat. There's bound to be a lot of excitement, but also plenty of complaints. You're bound to see players sharing their issues with the system this weekend, which may leave you wondering if it's worth waiting to buy one until the bugs are ironed out.

That would be a totally healthy response, but be warned: The fakers are coming. Take everything you see and hear this weekend with some healthy skepticism until the dust clears.

Read more