The Best Nintendo Switch Games of 2019 (So Far)

The Switch is good. I know that’s old news, but the Switch is easily the videogame system I play the most often these days, for a number of reasons. First off is because, well, I travel all the time. I can’t just pop a PlayStation 4 or the gaming PC I bought earlier this year in a carry on and get down to business during a flight to California. I can do exactly that with the Switch, though. Or when I’m laying in bed at the end of the night, or feel like quickly moving between the living room and a bedroom—Nintendo’s portable console makes it all fantastically easy. I can even fit the dock into my bag and bring it with me, if I think I’ll have time to play through a game for work on my hotel room’s TV. The Switch is good in part because of how convenient it is.
Much more important is the Switch’s library of games. Between Nintendo’s first party works and the deluge of fantastic smaller and artier games that constantly floods the Switch’s store, there’s always something I want to play on the Switch. I can’t say that about other platforms, but my Switch backlog is overwhelming.
2019 has really helped make that wait even younger. There have been more interesting Switch games over the first seven months of 2019 than I’ll ever be able to play. I have been able to clear enough time to fit every game below into my routine, and I can vouch for them all. If you own a Switch, any one of the 10 games below would be worth checking out. They’re all very different games—one’s a dunderheaded beat-’em-up based on 60 years of comic book goofery, one’s an unexpectedly combative reappraisal of perhaps the most famous game of all time, and another is just a 100 hour-plus epic that combines anime with Medieval fantasy and a deep focus on story and characterization. They’re all really good, though, and sometimes even great, along with the other seven games on the list.
Enough rambling. Let’s get to it. Here are the 10 best new games on the Switch so far in 2019.
10. Marvel Ultimate Alliance 3
The massive Marvel team-up brawler returned after a decade break, during which the blockbuster movies restored characters like Captain America, Thor and Iron Man to the upper echelon spots they occupied back in the ‘60s. Ultimate Alliance continues to remix decades of Marvel history, tossing a large, motley assortment of superheroes and villains into various locales from the comics, and pitting four at a time against constant streams of cannon fodder henchmen and the occasional villain boss. If you played the first two, or the X-Men Legends series that it grew out of, you’ll immediately be zapped back in time as if by Kang himself once you load this one up. It’s a blunt, brute force tool for nostalgia and fan service, but longtime fans of Marvel will love the recognition factor, and there’s just enough strategy required to keep your brain from fully checking out. I don’t believe in guilty pleasures, but that’s pretty much what this game is.—Garrett Martin
9. Cadence of Hyrule
Nintendo let Brace Yourself Games, the small Canadian studio responsible for Crypt of the Necrodancer, play with some of its most valuable toys in this unexpected Legend of Zelda spinoff. Stick to the beat of some of your favorite Zelda songs as you fight and explore your way through a procedurally generated mash-up of Zelda maps and dungeons. It’s an unlikely new twist on one of Nintendo’s biggest franchises, proving once again that there’s still a lot of fertile ground to cultivate within the world of Zelda.—Garrett Martin
8. Dragon Quest Builders 2
Dragon Quest Builders 2 is set in the building genre that Minecraft pioneered but, in a lot of ways, Dragon Quest Builders 2 does Minecraft better than Minecraft. There is a central narrative, objectives, waypoints and streamlined mechanics that make the title welcoming to almost any curious person, whether they are into Dragon Quest or not. The is roughly based off of 1987’s Dragon Quest 2 and sees you, the titular builder (male or female), tasked with rebuilding society after the Children of Hargon (I don’t know) decide to make the world slowly die. Each attempt at rebuilding society in some way is met with violence. So what is the builder to do in such trying times? Collect resources and build those walls just a little sturdier and higher, of course! Dragon Quest Builders 2 is deliberately straightforward in both its narrative and core gameplay loop. Nothing is obfuscated, everything is as easy to understand as it can be, and once players fall into its task-focused rhythm, everything becomes smooth sailing.—Cole Henry
7. Tetris 99
If you always thought Tetris would be better as a brutal war of attrition, pitting you against dozens of other players to see who can emerge from the block-strewn battlefield as the sole victor, well, Nintendo has good news for you. Tetris 99 turns the classic puzzler’s competitive multiplayer mode into a full-fledged battle royale game, with up to 99 different online players competing directly against each other. It plays just like the Tetris you know and remember. Blocks fall from the sky, you can turn them and move them right and left as they fall, and the goal is to use those blocks to form unbroken lines at the bottom of the screen. If you complete two or more lines at a time, you’ll send junk rows over to one of your 98 opponents, cluttering up their field and driving them closer to the end. You can target specific opponents with your junk rows, or anybody who’s close to going bust, or even just random people. (Really, Tetris 99 doesn’t care whose day you ruin.) And at the end there can be only one survivor. It’s like Fortnite or PUBG in puzzle form, wrapped around what’s probably the most famous videogame in the world.—Garrett Martin