Nintendo safeguards memory supply to cushion hardware price swings

Nintendo says it is securing stable memory component supplies to shield hardware profitability from rising prices; while price hikes are faster than expected, they did not affect Q3 profitability and aren’t expected to hit Q4, though prolonged shortages could press margins and trigger price changes after weighing profitability, installed base, and market conditions. Switch 2 sales in Japan outpaced other regions after holiday demand, and nine-month results show net sales of ¥1.9 trillion ($12.3B) and operating profit of ¥300.4B ($1.9B), with 17.37M Switch 2 units sold since June 2025, as Nintendo emphasizes updates to major titles to sustain the installed base during the transition.
- Nintendo working to "secure stable supplies of memory components" to avoid hardware price rises GamesIndustry.biz
- Nintendo Switch becomes the gaming giant's best-selling console ever CNBC
- The AI data center boom could cause a Nintendo Switch 2 memory shortage Scientific American
- Nintendo Acknowledges Switch 2 Sales Have Been 'Slightly Weaker' Than Expected Outside Japan IGN
- Nintendo president says increasing memory costs won’t affect Switch 2 price for now, but if it continues it will re-evaluate videogameschronicle.com
Reading Insights
0
3
4 min
vs 5 min read
89%
958 → 104 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on GamesIndustry.biz