Digital game collectors have just gotten a rare win in the form of a genuine pricing advantage. Nintendo announced that some Switch 2 games will cost less digitally than their physical counterparts. This move goes against the industry’s long-standing habit where both versions launch at the same price. On the official site, the company says that the price difference will begin in May, starting with preorders for Yoshi and the Mysterious Book.
Beginning in May 2026, and starting with preorders for Yoshi and the Mysterious Book, new Nintendo published digital titles exclusive to Nintendo Switch 2 will have an MSRP that is different from physical versions.
Nintendo games offer the same experiences whether in packaged or digital format, and this change simply reflects the different costs associated with producing and distributing each format and offers players more choice in how they can buy and play Nintendo games.
Don’t celebrate just yet, though. If you read the fine print, there are a number of qualifiers. It specifically mentioned that the new digital pricing applies only to ‘Nintendo-published games,’ and those released ‘exclusively’ on the Switch 2.
Yep, unfortunately, that means third-party games or cross-gen releases aren’t part of this new pricing scheme. This is also only MSRP; retailers can still price physical games however they want, depending on store-specific policies.

With prices of gas and everything creeping up, you might assume this is just Nintendo being Nintendo. Mario and Zelda game carts will get more expensive, while digital stays at $70, you thought. But a quick check suggests there may be an actual price shift happening.
As seen in the image above, Pokemon Pokopia and Mario Tennis Fever are listed at $69.99, both digitally and physically on eShop. Meanwhile, the preorder for digital Yoshi and the Mysterious Book is already sitting at $59.99 — $69.99 for the physical edition. That’s a real $10 difference!
Still, whether that becomes the new standard going forward or just a test is the bigger question. If Nintendo sticks to this structure, Switch 2 could finally be the platform where buying digital isn’t just more convenient. It’s actually cheaper.







