Nintendo switch 2 genki ces 2025 – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Is this the Nintendo Switch 2?

Accessory maker Genki brought a 3D-printed mockup of the Nintendo Switch 2 to CES, and we photographed it.

Accessory maker Genki brought a 3D-printed mockup of the Nintendo Switch 2 to CES, and we photographed it.

A photo of Genki’s Nintendo Switch 2 mockup.
A photo of Genki’s Nintendo Switch 2 mockup.

Nintendo isn’t officially at CES, but it might have stolen the show anyway: accessory maker Genki brought a 3D-printed mockup of what it says is Nintendo’s Switch successor, and we got to hold it and take some high-resolution pictures.

Based on the mockup of what we’ll call the Switch 2, Nintendo’s next console appears to be wider than the original, with slightly larger Joy-Con controllers that seem like they’ll be more comfortable to hold. Compared to a Steam Deck OLED, the Switch 2 mockup still feels noticeably smaller, in part because the Joy-Cons are not as pronounced and ergonomic as the Deck’s grips. But the mockup still feels closer in size to Valve’s handheld than the original Switch.

A white, 3D-printed mockup of a Nintendo Switch 2 held in a hand above Valve’s Steam Deck.
<em>The top of the Switch 2 mockup also has a USB-C port.</em>
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A rough size comparison with a Steam Deck OLED.
Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

As previous rumors have indicated, the Switch 2’s Joy-Cons will attach to the console via magnets instead of a sliding rail, Genki cofounder and CEO Eddie Tsai tells The Verge. To detach a Joy-Con from the Switch 2, you press a big button at the top of the backside of each controller, Tsai says, and that button apparently pushes out a pin that nudges against the chassis of the console, disconnecting the magnets.

You can remove the Joy-Cons with brute force if you really want to, according to Tsai, but he says, overall, they feel secure for regular use, and the big release button detaches the Joy-Cons with ease. Tsai declined to share where he’d learned details of the new console.

<em>The left Joy-Con without pressing the detachment button.</em>
<em>Pressing the detachment button extends the pin to remove the Joy-Cons from the console.</em>
<em>The interior channel of the Joy-Con (right) and Switch 2 mockup (left) where the magnets are housed.</em>
<em>The latch for detaching the Joy-Cons is under the shoulder buttons.</em>
<em>Detaching the Joy-Con mockup from a charging stand mockup.</em>
<em>The Joy-Con attached to its charging stand mockup.</em>
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The left Joy-Con without pressing the detachment button.
Photo by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

Tsai also tells The Verge that housed within the mounting channel of the Joy-Cons is an optical sensor and that, by using another attachment, the new Joy-Cons may offer mouse-like functionality. It sounds a bit like what Lenovo does with its Legion Go handheld.

Nintendo has promised that it will announce the Switch’s successor before April 2025, and as that deadline creeps closer, there have been waves of leaks and rumors about the new hardware. In December, YouTube channel SwitchUp posted a video showing a 3D-printed, nonfunctional Switch 2 mockup provided by a Chinese case manufacturer. That mockup basically looked like the current Switch but bigger, and it revealed a few other potential changes, like a new USB-C port on the top of the device and a mysterious new square button under the Home button on the right Joy-Con.

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Days later, accessory maker Dbrand announced its “Killswitch 2” case, and CEO Adam Ijaz told The Verge that it was designed based on “actual dimensions” from a “3D scan of the real hardware.” Ijaz also said that it was his “understanding” that the console’s Joy-Cons were magnetically attached. And Dbrand’s imagery showed that the new square button had a “C” printed on it, though Ijaz didn’t know what it was. Days after that, our colleague Sean Hollister spoke with a Redditor who shared apparent photos of the Switch 2’s dock and the inside of what appeared to be a Switch 2 Joy-Con.

With that April 2025 deadline inching closer every day, it seems like it won’t be long until Nintendo officially, finally reveals the Switch 2. But until that happens, at least we have these pictures to look at.

Photography by Antonio G. Di Benedetto / The Verge

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