The Best Switch Games of 2024 (So Far)

What, you thought we were going to stop with the PlayStation 5? Once we get on a roll ranking new games we can’t stop until we’ve hit every console out there. Today it’s Nintendo’s turn, as we run down the best Switch games of 2024 (so far). After all, we’re just past the halfway mark for the year, so what better time to look back in wistful nostalgia for stuff that we played like six weeks ago?
Weirdly enough, the Switch has been fairly light on great first-party games this year. Princess Peach: Showtime is perfectly fine, but the best Nintendo game of the year so far (and the only one made by Nintendo pop up on the list below) is a remake of one of the very best GameCube games. That’ll no doubt change as Nintendo releases more games throughout the year, but so far the best Switch games come from smaller studios and publishers, including at least two games made by solo developers. That points to one of the Switch’s greatest strengths: it’s not just the only way to play Nintendo’s reliably good videogames, but a fantastic portal into the world of independent games.
That said, let’s get down to business. Here are the best Switch games of 2024 (so far).
10. Penny’s Big Breakaway
With its momentum-based movement and Sega Genesis color palette, Penny’s Big Breakaway proudly wears its influences on its sleeves. Rich in charm and cleverly designed levels, perfect for zipping through quickly enough to make even Sonic The Hedgehog dizzy, this homage to a bygone era of platforming only trips in its dedication to feeling like an old game. But if you look past its nostalgic inconveniences, you’ll find a short-but-sweet 3D platformer with clever platforming design and high replay value in equal measure. Here’s a game that’s not just worth playing, but replaying and finding every little secret. Even if its retro vibes and dated designs can be frustrating, they account for pennies out of each successful dollar that Penny’s Big Breakaway cashes in thanks to its sense of speed, charming art direction, and clever innovations.—Charlie Wacholz
9. Unicorn Overlord
This is more or less the story of Unicorn Overlord: Its art is beautiful, its battle system is fun, and it has the best gameplay loop of maybe any SRPG I’ve ever played, reminiscent of old Fire Emblem if it were built with modern conveniences. It’s a pretty wrapper for a bad story, but that story is at least unobtrusive enough that it neither adds nor takes away from the gameplay. Building towns and promoting units gave me an unmatched feeling of satisfaction, and when I got to see my improvements play out against an especially tough battle, it felt great. I did find myself dragging my feet at about the 30 hour mark, when I was close enough to the end to have made most of the improvements to my army that I could, but no longer pulled through by the momentum of the story. What made me push through wasn’t just how fun the action is, but the small things: the design of new items in the shop, the new towns to save, and the fun of remixing my units to see if they could win in new ways.—Emily Price
8. Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door
The beloved, hard-to-find GameCube original gets a Switch remake with a few notable changes, updates, and restorations. Guess what: it’s just as great as it was 20 years ago, a charming, clever RPG romp with a unique perspective on classic Mario characters and concepts, and one of the best Switch games of 2024. It somehow manages to be a genuinely deep, rewarding RPG, with emotional highpoints and memorable relationships, while also maintaining a fun and breezy tone most of the time. The remake doesn’t just render this once hard-to-afford game attainable again; it also restores a key character trait that was cut out of the initial American release, with the ghost witch Vivian finally announcing her trans status here 20 years after it was edited out during its original localization.—Garrett Martin
7. Tales of Kenzera: ZAU
The beauty of Tales of Kenzera: ZAU is that grief is not linear. It’s not something you heal from and it doesn’t ever look the same across two people. It’s a deeply unique experience, but at the same time, it’s also universal. The complexity of grief is what makes it so. Zau feels anger, guilt, and sadness. He feels all of it and he mediates those emotions in the Great Spirits he helps cross over. He helps a parent loosen their grip on their child, he provides a salve to the anger between father and son, and he learns to let go. Each new character is a different expression of why you can get stuck in your loss, how it can debilitate you and keep you in an endless loop, ultimately impacting those around you. But even when the darkness rushes in at the end of boss battles as you try to escape a zone, the vibrancy of those emotions is never lost. When I pitched this article, I didn’t know if anyone would understand what I meant. The grief that Surgent Studios has captured is vibrant and saturated. It’s not a dull pang or a numbness that creeps. It’s more potent and the beautiful world it lives in makes it all the more impactful.—Kate Sánchez