How Nintendo is pulling off an incredible comeback


It seems as though Nintendo (NTDOY) can do no wrong right now. The company, which struggled for more than five years to get its ill-fated Wii U console in consumers’ hands before mercifully killing it in January 2017, is flying high on the sales of its Switch hybrid console and a slew of awards for its best-selling, first-party games.

It’s not just the Switch that has fans and the street excited about Nintendo, though. The company is also diving deeper into smartphone gaming with the announcement that it will bring its popular “Mario Kart” franchise to Google’s (GOOG, GOOGL) Android and Apple’s (AAPL) iOS handsets sometime within the next fiscal year.

If Nintendo can keep the hits coming, it may eclipse the stratospheric highs it reached following the release of the Wii back in 2005. But that will require a steady stream of high-profile games, proof that its mobile strategy is working and ensuring that it can pull in the kinds of big-name, volume-selling titles that power the modern games industry.

Switch hitter

The Nintendo Switch has helped the company turn itself around.
The Nintendo Switch has helped the company turn itself around.

To call the Switch a much-needed smash hit for Nintendo is the understatement of the century. The Wii U, which was supposed to merge a traditional home console with the portability of a tablet, was a certified disaster. The console, which was already underpowered compared to contemporaries like Sony’s (SNE) Playstation 4 and Microsoft’s (MSFT) Xbox One, felt like an anachronism designed for a time before online multiplayer and near-photorealistic graphics were major selling points among gamers.

Over the course of the Wii U’s lifetime, Nintendo managed to sell just 13.6 million consoles. Sony, meanwhile, has sold 70.6 million Playstation 4 consoles since the system was released in late 2013, according to Polygon. That’s… not great.

The Switch, however, is a different story entirely. Consumers purchased a ridiculous 14.86 million Switches between its March 2017 launch and Dec. 2017. That’s especially impressive when you consider that the console was nearly impossible to get in the weeks following its debut.

Nintendo’s Wii U was a disaster for the company.
Nintendo’s Wii U was a disaster for the company.

“It is an incredible turnaround. No doubt about it,” said IDC video game analyst Lewis Ward. “It’s probably what Nintendo hoped the Wii U would have turned out to have been in retrospect, but clearly was not.”

See, while the Wii U had a rudimentary tablet with an unresponsive touch screen, the Switch is a fully mobile device you can bring anywhere you want. The system can also be connected to your big screen TV when you’re at home. Of course, a game console is only as good as the software it runs.

Nintendo’s development studios are responsible for some of most iconic characters, let alone games, in history. And the company has brought those creative forces to bear with the Switch. The console’s marquee launch title “The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild,” is already considered one of the best games ever made, while “Super Mario: Odyssey,” which launched in Oct. 2017 ranks among the greatest “Mario” games to-date. Three of Nintendo’s first-party games, those it developed internally, have already surpassed the 6 million units sold mark.