Skip to main content

An Xbox game could be coming to Switch. Here are the most likely candidates

If the rumor mill is to be trusted (and it rarely is), we might see an exclusive Xbox game on Nintendo Switch soon. The rumor comes from Nate the Hate, a content creator with a track record of correctly predicting game announcements. According to him, Microsoft is preparing to launch a critically acclaimed Xbox game on Nintendo’s platform soon. He’s staying tight-lipped on what game that actually is, though.

With no confirmation, gaming fans spent the weekend fantasizing about what Xbox title could be Switch-bound. The most common theory is last year’s excellent Hi-Fi Rush, which other would-be insiders have backed up. Still, there’s no official word on anything, making it the perfect recipe for getting one’s hopes up.

Recommended Videos

The best I can do is help set some expectations. In reality, there is a precedent for Microsoft games coming to Switch. Just look at titles like last year’s Minecraft Legends. Naturally, only a handful of titles could run on the Switch’s dated hardware — sorry, Starfield fans. Here are the four most likely options; call me an insider if I get it right.

Hi-Fi Rush

Chai points a finger gun at a robot in Hi-Fi Rush.
Xbox Game Studios

Let’s talk about the biggest possibility first: Hi-Fi Rush. In a YouTube video, Nate the Hate notes that the game in question is critically acclaimed and was in game of the year conversations at release. For the sake of fun speculation, we’re going to take that claim at face value. If that’s indeed true, Hi-Fi Rush is a fair option. It was a huge critical darling in 2023, reviewing better than titles like Starfield and Star Wars Jed: Survivor, according to Metacritic. Plus, thanks to its colorful art style, it seems like a perfect fit for the handheld.

The question here is whether the Switch could actually run it. While it’s a smaller game, it isn’t a cross-generation release; you can’t play it on Xbox One. That would imply it’s perhaps a little more powerful than fans might expect. Granted, Bethesda has a history of squeezing powerful games like Doom Eternal onto Switch with fairly impressive ports. There’s a fair chance that Hi-Fi Rush could get the same treatment, but Bethesda will really have to push the Switch to its limits to make it work.

Pentiment

A bonfire rages on during a Tassing celebration in Pentiment.
Obsidian Entertainment

While Hi-Fi Rush would be the most exciting possibility, there’s a much more plausible option. Obsidian’s Pentiment, a critically acclaimed 16th-century RPG, seems like it would have a much easier time running on the Switch. It’s less technically demanding thanks to its visual novel setup and would pair well with a portable console. Considering that it reviewed quite well when it launched in 2022, it would fit Nate the Hate’s bill of a “game of the year contender.”

While Microsoft owns Obsidian, there’s precedent for its games appearing on Switch. 2019’s The Outer Worlds got a Switch port in 2020, two years after Microsoft acquired the company. It’s reasonable to imagine that Pentiment could get the same treatment if Microsoft were looking further to expand the audience of a niche console game. For what it’s worth, I think it would be the best option of the four here. A game like Pentiment feels custom-made for the Switch because of its portable nature. Microsoft would be smart to bring smaller titles like it to Nintendo’s system.

As Dusk Falls

An As Dusk Falls character looks concerned in the diner at night.
Microsoft Games Studio

I imagine those previous two options will be common points of speculation, but there’s one sleeper pick that’s more likely than either of them: As Dusk Falls. Like Pentiment, the small-scale visual novel seems like a logical match for the Switch’s limited hardware. Plus, the episodic nature of its story would lend itself well to a pick-up-and-play device like the Switch. It’s meant to be played in half-hour chunks, almost like watching a TV show.

Though it wasn’t exactly a “game of the year” contender in 2022, it did receive some critical acclaim from sites like IGN and Gamespot. It even landed a Game Award win in the Games for Impact category. What makes this more realistic is that developer Interior Night announced in December that the title would be coming to PlayStation consoles this March. Considering that a multiplatform port is already in the works, it’s entirely possible that a Switch version ends up coming out near or alongside that.

Psychonauts 2

Raz staring into the camera in Psychonauts 2.
Xbox Game Studios

Perhaps the answer could be even more obvious, though. While newer games are top of mind for gamers, plenty of cross-generation Xbox games from the early Series X days could still make a jump to Switch. Chief among those possibilities is Psychonauts 2. While the other three games I mentioned here were all theoretical “contenders,” Double Fine’s beloved platformer is the only one that actually snagged a Game of the Year nomination at the Game Awards the year it launched.

Considering that it runs on PS4 and Xbox One, it’s easier to imagine that Double Fine could get it running on Switch over a new release like Hi-Fi Rush. It’s also already a multiplatform game, available cross-generation on PC, PlayStation, and Xbox. I was surprised to remember that it isn’t already on Switch, as one would think that a colorful platformer that takes cues from Nintendo’s design playbook would have been ported there by now. While I wouldn’t be surprised to see any of the games mentioned here on Switch, Psychonauts 2 might be the most sensible option.

Giovanni Colantonio
As Digital Trends' Senior Gaming Editor, Giovanni Colantonio oversees all things video games at Digital Trends. As a veteran…
Every upcoming video game console: Nintendo Switch 2, PS5 Pro and more
A PS5 sits on a table with a DualSense standing up next to it.

History would tell you that 2024 isn't a year where you should expect a lot of new game consoles. We're smack dab in the middle of a console generation and we've already seen the PlayStation 5 and the Xbox Series S get upgrades during it. A wave of brand new consoles is likely four years away if the precedent set by previous generations holds up.

And yet, we're swimming in hardware rumors these days. Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo all have rumored systems in the works. On top of that, we're on the verge of an early second generation for portable PCs like the Steam Deck. Companies like Lenovo and Asus are also plotting follow-ups to their own devices. It's a lot to keep track of, with scattered reports sharing rumors about the status of each. To help you stay on top of the news, we've rounded up every major gaming device that's currently in the works. You can expect to see some -- if not all -- of these in the next year.
Nintendo Switch 2

Read more
Sea of Thieves confirmed for PS5 as Xbox details multiplatform rollout
Enemies in Sea of Thieves

Microsoft has finally laid out when people can expect Sea of Thieves, Hi-Fi Rush, Pentiment, and Grounded to go fully multiplatform.

On Wednesday morning, Pentiment and Grounded were confirmed for Nintendo Switch during the February Nintendo Direct Partner Showcase, and Hi-Fi Rush's PS5 release date leaked shortly thereafter. After all that, Microsoft put out an Xbox Wire post detailing which four of its Xbox console-exclusive games will go multiplatform and when they will do so. Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer previously refused to do so during a podcast confirming Xbox's multiplatform plans on February 15.

Read more
Grounded and Pentiment are the first Xbox games to come to Nintendo Switch
Characters in Grounded game.

During Wednesday's Nintendo Direct: Partner Showcase, we learned about two of the Xbox Game Studios titles that are going multiplatform. The games in question are Obsidian Entertainment's Grounded and Pentiment, and the latter will launch tomorrow on Nintendo Switch.

Earlier this year, various leaks and rumors suggested that first-party Xbox exclusives like Hi-Fi Rush and Pentiment could make their way over to competing platforms. Microsoft finally addressed the rumors on February 15, confirming that it planned to bring four of its first-party games to non-Xbox platforms over the course of 2024. Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer wouldn't say what any of the specific games were at the time, though, stating that "the teams that are building those games have announced plans that are not too far away." It's now clear that Spencer was partially referring to this Nintendo Direct, as two of the games showed up here.

Read more