The effortless joy of Nintendo Switch Sports
Hello! We’ve had Nintendo Switch Sports for about a week, but we haven’t had access to the online modes yet. Because of this we’re holding off on our actual review. But now the embargo’s lifted we wanted to tell you a bit about how the game feels offline at least. This isn’t a review, then, but good news – we think the game’s brilliant.
Nintendo Switch Sports launches with six sports. Tennis, chambara and bowling will be familiar to fans of the series, although there are a few tweaks throughout. Football, badminton and volleyball are new. (Golf is coming as a free update in the autumn.) Today I’ll focus on the new games to keep things brisk, but I’ll cover the complete package of games in the final review.
Nintendo Switch Sports
- Publisher: Nintendo
- Developer: Nintendo
- Platform: Played on Switch
- Availability: Out 29th April on Nintendo Switch.
Badminton is the most familiar of the new games. It’s also the one which I’ve played the least so far. It’s great: inevitably it feels like a lighter, faster tennis, which makes sense. There’s a lovely feel to the shuttlecock as it zips back and forth, and while aiming is important, most of the games I’ve played have relied on the use of drop shots and the more powerful smashes.
What I already love about badminton, which is played with a single Joy-Con held as a racket, is the rallies, which have a thrilling pace to them. Playing with my daughter, she much preferred badminton to the weightier tennis – and I think a lot of that came down to the simple joy of knocking the shuttlecock back and forth for absolutely ages. Movement of your character is taken care of and it seems like the timing is pretty generous, but the Joy-Con feels very responsive when it comes to direction and power. Badminton’s great as both a single and two-player game.
Volleyball is really interesting. I love playing it, but I also love what it reveals about the way Nintendo’s designers see a sport and break it down to its most engaging and essential components.
Volleyball as seen through this lens is all about timing. Playing with a single Joy-Con you swipe up to serve, bump, set, and spike the ball. Player movement is handled for you, which is actually lovely: it’s a pleasure to see your characters zipping into position. More importantly it turns volleyball into a game that’s preoccupied with getting the timing just so. There’s something properly beautiful about pitching the ball to a team-mate who then hammers it across the net.
This is quite an aggressive sport – my sister once broke a schoolfriend’s nose playing volleyball. An accident, but still. For all its cheeriness, Nintendo Switch Sports captures this aspect of the game. Not the nose-breaking, but the way that volleyball gets your blood pumping. There’s a real pleasure to the way a perfectly aimed and perfectly timed ball shoots across the net and bounces off the floor. Smack! Played with four people it’s an intricate delight as the ball bounces back and forth, hopefully ending up where it’s meant to be.