Top Switch Games for 2024 (iGV)

What’s the Best Nintendo Switch Game?

Pick a winner

With the potential arrival of a sometime next year, the Nintendo Switch already has an amazing lineup of games available. The hybrid portable console has surpassed the PlayStation 4 and Game Boy to become the third with over 132.46 million units sold, Nintendo Switch Online has added Game Boy and Game Boy Advance games, and Nintendo struck a 10-year deal with Microsoft to port . While Call of Duty fans wait for the first wave of ports, here are the 25 best Switch games you can play to hold you over.

But what do we mean by “best?” To be very clear, this is not an attempt at an “objective” ranking that will indisputably line up with the tastes of gamers of all types. Instead, this is a list of games that iGV’s crew of Switch gamers recommend as a group, ranked using our Face-Off tool so that everybody – including our NVC Podcast hosts – got to weigh in equally. It’s presented in the spirit of recognizing games we love, and encouraging others to try them if you haven’t.

With only 25 slots to fill, there are tons of amazing recent games that didn’t float to the top – but that doesn’t mean we don’t think they’re awesome, too!

Most importantly, remember that this list is just our group’s picks and is no more “right” or “wrong” than a list that you create yourself. Speaking of which: if you have your own ranking you’d like to put out into the world, we’d like to invite you to make your own top 25 (or top 100!) list of Switch games using our and share it in the comments.

So without further ado, these are our picks for the 25 best Nintendo Switch games. You can also check out for additional picks.

25. Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker

While many hit Nintendo games like Breath of the Wild, Super Mario Odyssey, and Metroid Dread revel in colorful bombast and action, Captain Toad showcases the smaller, whimsical side of Nintendo’s creativity. Weighed down by a backpack as big as he is, Captain Toad navigates diorama-like puzzle boxes in search of treasure. Each little level bursts with detail: secret corners, invisible secrets, clever mechanisms all wait for anyone patient enough to fiddle with the toy long enough to find them. And “a toy” is just what Captain Toad feels like, hearkening back to Nintendo’s old days as a playing card company.

Its levels take on a tactile component, Rubix Cube-like, needing to be rotated, poked at, and scoured completely before they give up their last secrets. Captain Toad’s (and yes, his brave buddy Toadette’s too!) adventures were some of the best the Wii U had to offer, and are fully worthy of the port from the Wii U to Switch, which also added 18 new levels and co-op multiplayer. Ten years from its first release, Captain Toad: Treasure tracker remains one of the best games on not one, but two Nintendo consoles.

24. Fire Emblem Engage

Fire Emblem Engage prioritizes and polishes the series’ iconic tactical combat with UI improvements, the return of the tactical weapon triangle, and the introduction of the titular Engage mechanic, which allows your units to temporarily fuse with heroes from Fire Emblem’s past. From Marth and Roy to Ike and Byleth, these legendary heroes grant your units access to flashy, powerful skills, weapons, and attacks, and play into Engage’s classic tale of good versus evil. It’s an excellent entry in the 30-year-old franchise that incorporates Fire Emblem’s rich history without being prohibitive to series newcomers.

23. Slay the Spire

There’s something about ’s balance of strategy and randomness that makes it an endlessly replayable puzzle. Assembling that perfect combo of synergistic cards can feel incredible, but there’s also a joy in scraping your way to victory despite the odds never quite falling in your favor. With that potent package on the Switch’s mobile platform — with some fairly decent touch control options, we might add — it’s a miracle we’ve ever stopped playing it.

Slay the Spire made our updated list of the 10 .

22. Stardew Valley

is a wonderfully open-ended farming sim. You’ll forge your own country path with , fighting, farming, and falling in love. Additionally, being able to take advantage of the Switch’s sleep mode helps take some of the pressure off of not being able to save in the middle of a day, even if a few other bugs in the port are still waiting to be squashed here.

Stardew Valley is , and is one of the around.

21. Xenoblade Chronicles 3

is one of the biggest and best JRPGs available on Switch. Its fantastical world, endearing characters, and ultimately satisfying story make this 150-hour epic a journey well worth taking. Xenoblade Chronicles 3 also features the series’ best side quests and most varied combat to date, thanks to its new class-swapping mechanic.

20. Celeste

is a surprise masterpiece. Its 2D platforming is some of the best and toughest since , with levels that are as challenging to figure out as they are satisfying to complete. But the greatest triumph of Celeste is that its best-in-class jumping and dashing is blended beautifully with an important and sincere story and an incredible soundtrack that make it a genuinely emotional game, even when your feet are planted firmly on the ground.

The developer’s next game is called , a “2D explor-action game in a seamless pixel art world.” It was originally scheduled to come out in 2024, but developer Maddy Thorson said in a recent blog post that , although development is progressing.

19. The Legend of Zelda: Link’s Awakening

With its charming, toyetic visual style and bizarrely dark undertones, the vast island of Koholint in has never looked better than it does on Nintendo Switch. Link’s shipwrecked adventure on a mysterious island rife with eccentric characters and sprawling dungeons has always been one of the stranger Zelda stories, and this remake allows new audiences and aging fans alike to appreciate it on a modern system. It modernizes the classic beloved Zelda game with a shiny new coat of paint, some excellent quality of life improvements, and loads more hidden collectibles but, ultimately, its greatest accomplishment is retaining the weird, haunting, beautiful feeling of the original Game Boy game.

See our guide to the to see how it fits into the series.

18. Astral Chain

Platinum Games makes some of the best action games around – that much is all but indisputable. It’s approach is unique, and as a result the Switch-exclusive Astral Chain is truly one of a kind in that you’re simultaneously controlling not just your character, but also a living weapon tethered to them known as a Legion. This creates a thrilling style of combat that looks spectacular and feels incredible to play around with. Astral Chain is challenging, rewarding, is absolutely jam packed with depth in its combat systems, and has an engaging story as well, with clear inspiration from anime classics such as Neon Genesis Evangelion, Ghost in the Shell, and Appleseed, among others.

17. Super Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury

offers two fantastic Mario experiences that compliment each other brilliantly. 3D World landed on the Wii U and gave fans a unique blend of 2D and 3D platforming, all of which could (optionally) be played with up to four players in a setup that worked better than the New Super Mario series accomplished. Inventive and just plain fun, it was too good of a game to keep stranded on the Wii U forever, and its port to Switch came with bonus online co-op capabilities, a photo mode feature, and more.

But the biggest draw for fans who had already played 3D World was Bowser’s Fury, a brand-new, open-world experience that lasts roughly 3 to 6 hours. Though only a small taste by series standards, this free-form experiment stands as a proof of concept that an open-world can be just as creative, exhilarating, and enjoyable as what we’ve seen in the franchise thus far. If this is the direction the next mainline Mario goes, it’s an exciting future indeed.

16. Splatoon 3

The fine-tuning of makes for the series’ best online modes to date, while the introduction of a more fleshed-out single-player campaign elevates it to one of the best overall games available on Switch. The multiplayer is an improvement on Splatoon’s established formula thanks to new weapons, enemies, customization options, and an improved lobby system. The Return of the Mammalians campaign, meanwhile, presents 70 cleverly designed missions, five memorable boss fights, and a soundtrack oozing with style.

15. Dragon Quest XI S: Echoes of an Elusive Age – Definitive Edition

Other games on this list represent huge innovations and genre shakeups, but Dragon Quest XI S earns its spot because of how classic it feels. This RPG plays like an ode to the 1990s era, and it does an astonishingly good job at taking the classic turn-based format and freshening it up for a modern audience. All the elements you’d expect from a tribute like this are here: Exciting and balanced combat, a nostalgic tale of good against evil, a lovable band of heroes, and a vibrant world to explore.

Every component of Dragon Quest XI S feels meticulously designed and polished, and it’s obvious that so much love and care went into crafting this adventure for Dragon Quest’s 30th anniversary. Plus, the Switch version is truly definitive, with additional story content, fully orchestrated music, and the option to swap back and forth between modern 3D graphics and SNES-inspired, top-down pixel art.

14. Luigi’s Mansion 3

is essentially a FrankenLuigistein’s monster of the first two games, a mashup of both that creates the perfect Luigi’s Mansion experience. Charming, clever, and absolutely gorgeous to look at, Luigi’s Mansion is 17 levels of pure ghost-hunting joy. Working your way through each of the haunted hotels may never extremely challenging, but the creative boss fights and deviously hidden collectibles will keep you busy for a dozen hours or more. The excitement of getting to a new level just to see its theme (TV Studio! Sewer Maze! Egypt!) is well worth the price of admission, plus the game opens with Toad driving a bus. Priceless.

is available now.

13. Fire Emblem: Three Houses

takes the series to new heights, deftly blending grueling battles with an expansive social hub that allows for near limitless customization as you recruit, train, and bond with the memorable characters on your team. Its unique take on a three-pronged story ensures that no matter , the engrossing plot that unfolds always leaves enough mystery to make multiple playthroughs incredibly hard to resist.

The series’ next mainline game, , is now available on Switch. iGV awarded it a review score of 9 and said Engage “proves itself worthy enough to be counted alongside the legacy it honors so well.”

12. Animal Crossing: New Horizons

Released on the doorstep of a global pandemic, provided a much need escape to many, selling nearly 34 million copies to date. Routine and discovery play equally important roles as you plan the perfect layout for your island, make friends (or enemies) with all your , and invite your friends to your own little utopia to trade items and swap secrets.

It’s brilliant in its simplicity and masterful in the way it encourages players to keep up with chores, redecorate and/or reshape entire plots of land, or burn dozens of hours trying to catch rare fish or find every last seasonal item. It certainly helps that all the writing is supremely funny and that, hundreds of hours in, you’re still able to chuckle at a random comment or find genuine inspiration in the places you’d least expect.

Taking a cue from many of Nintendo’s Switch editions of their long-running franchises, Animal Crossing New Horizons does little to completely reinvent the franchise, but it makes a great series even more accessible, more exciting, and more wonderful than it has ever been.

New Horizons is officially of all time. Animal Crossing players can get even more out of it with the DLC. Our reviewer Taylor Lyles called the expansion “a must-have for base game owners.”

11. Metroid Prime Remastered

A masterclass in game design, Metroid Prime is now playable on Switch with a fresh coat of paint and much-needed improvements to its 20-year-old control scheme. As Samus Aran, players follow a distress signal to a Space Pirate frigate where Nintendo’s iconic bounty hunter sets off on a solitary adventure equipped with a growing arsenal of combat and platforming abilities. is moody, surprising, inventive, and as iGV’s reviewer Sam Claiborn wrote, “one of the best first-person shooters ever made, full stop.”

Metroid Prime 4: Beyond will release in 2025.

Best of Nintendo Switch

The iGV Playlist team’s recommendations for the best games to play on Nintendo Switch right now. (Pokemon Sword and Shield counts as one game of 25.)

10. Pikmin 4

Pikmin 4 and its charming creatures – including the new adorable new pup, Oatchi – stick the landing in the strategy-puzzle series’ Switch debut. It comes with plenty of new features and upgrades that improve the tried-and-true formula of the first three games, including the largest number of enemies to battle, treasures to collect, and awesome post-game content. It does all of this without its adorable gameplay becoming overcomplicated, making it an ideal starting point to jump in if you’ve never played before (nothing against the Switch ports of Pikmin 1 and 2 or Pikmin 3 Deluxe), but it’s also filled with callbacks to the earlier games for longtime fans.

9. Super Mario Bros. Wonder

Super Mario Bros. Wonder proves Nintendo can still hang with the best of them in the 2D platformer category. After nearly two decades of (relatively) bland New Super Mario Bros. games, Nintendo confidently returned to Mario’s roots in Wonder, which lives up to its subtitle thanks to its gorgeously fresh art style, huge amount of clever new enemy types, and inventive Wonder Flower mechanics that constantly surprise and delight by completely turning everything on its head in the middle of a level.

Whether Mario’s marching alongside an army of singing Piranha Plants or desperately trying to survive as a lowly Goomba, Wonder’s creativity and imagination is on full blast from start to finish, resulting in a modern 2D classic that feels like the first worthy heir to Nintendo’s legendary Mario 3 and Mario World. Oh, and Elephant Mario is a pure work of art, too.

8. Hades

Roguelikes don’t always appeal to everyone, but has somehow found a way to win over even those with a distaste for them. Fighting your way out of the Greek underworld is a ruthless and challenging affair, but every failure is rewarded in a way that somehow makes them exciting in their own right.

Instead of just notching up each loss and moving onto the next, the moments between each run push Hades’ excellent storytelling to the forefront, giving you opportunities to learn more about its charming characters and grow close to them – as well as improve the prince of the underworld’s abilities and weapons. It’s that meaningful mix of progression and infinitely repeatable escape attempts (coupled with genuinely fantastic writing, art, and action) that make Hades as delectable as Ambrosia itself.

is now available on Steam.

7. Hollow Knight

is one of the ’s available, using all the pieces that make the genre so great in the first place without feeling derivative of anything that came before it.

The expertly crafted map that is the kingdom of Hallownest has an absurd amount of paths to explore, bosses to fight, and secrets to uncover. That’s all drawn in a somber but expressive art style that gives the adorable bug people who live their lives, and stories, of their own. It can undoubtedly be a challenging and demanding game, but what you get out of will be a reward worth far more than you put in.

The sequel, Hollow Knight: Silksong, was supposed to be released in the first half of 2023, but due to ongoing development.

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