The 10 Best Nintendo Switch Games of 2022 (So Far)

Last week we ran down the best games of 2022 so far. That one article didn’t satiate our bottomless digital media thirst for lists and rankings, so let’s break it all down by console, starting with the Switch. If a Switch is the only system you own, this is the only “best of” list you need to read. Note that this was compiled before last Friday’s release of Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes, the new musou game based on Nintendo’s popular tactics series, and thus it wasn’t considered; if it’s really good, it might make our year-end list.
From big name Nintendo franchises to small studio wonders, here are the best Nintendo Switch games of 2022 so far.
10. Nintendo Switch Sports
No remake of Wii Sports could ever match the massive pop cultural impact of the original, but it doesn’t have to. All a game like Nintendo Switch Sports has to be is fun, and it pulls that off in spades. Bowling and tennis will sink their hooks into you as much as the Wii versions did 15 years ago, and new additions like volleyball and soccer bring a bit of mechanical depth not found in the classics. It’s not really a game you’ll sit around and play by yourself, but with a group it’s almost as entertaining as the Wii was back in the ‘00s.
9. Card Shark
Card Shark is less a card game and more a game about cheating at cards. The first tricks I learned outlined the necessity of a rhythm, since trickery takes confidence, not luck. Once I began nailing the pedestrian magic tricks, though, the world of Card Shark’s tricks exploded. I never knew parlor tricks could be so complicated, but Card Shark boasts a whopping 28 of them, and they build atop one another once you start reaching the double digits. To add to the tension, you’re always under the watchful eye of your opponents, who will eventually see enough to call your bluffs, incarcerate you, or even have you killed, which is its own whimsical in-game delight.—Moises Taveras
8. Sol Cresta
I need to remind y’all that I write an irregular column about shoot ‘em ups, aka shmups—those old-fashioned games where players pilot some sort of craft or creature or vaguely Barbarella-inspired angel across the screen while shooting as many enemies as they possibly can. A core staple of any gaming diet in the ‘80s, the genre gradually fell out of favor with the masses, and exists today primarily as a cult curiosity or nostalgic throwback. Sol Cresta, the latest heir to the inexplicably difficult 1985 shooter Terra Cresta, probably won’t restore the shmup to the top of the gaming pyramid, but it’s not like it’s trying to. It’s a shoot ‘em up solidly for shoot ‘em up fans, and the latest high-energy action game from Platinum, the studio behind Bayonetta, Vanquish, and Nier: Automata. Terra Cresta’s defining feature is the ability to expand and contract the power-ups collected throughout the game; instead of just beefing up the ship’s weapons, they can be used as pods that orbit the ship and provide a wider range of fire. Sol Cresta pays tribute to that concept by letting players dock multiple ships together. It’s an exciting new entry in a largely overlooked genre, and while everybody else was venturing forth into Elden Ring for the first time, I was shooting up space again like I’ve done a million times before.
7. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revenge
This loving tribute to the multiplayer beat ‘em ups of the late ‘80s and early ‘90s focuses like a laser on the nostalgia of a certain generation. It’s not just that it’s based on the version of the Turtles from the first cartoon and toy series (complete with the original voice actors), the same era that inspired the beloved arcade brawler from 1989; the entire genre is so inherently old-fashioned that it can’t help but feel like some long-lost game from 30 years ago. If you miss teaming up with your friends to bash generic punks and thugs in a cartoonish version of New York City, Shredder’s Revenge will wind back the clock for you. It wouldn’t make this list if it was just nostalgia, though; Shredder’s Revenge adds enough modern tweaks to drag that formula into the 21st century. It’s an example of a game that does what it sets out to do about as well as it possibly could.