Nintendo bets on franchises like Mario and Pokemon to boost Switch 2

Nintendo bets on franchises like Mario and Pokemon to boost Switch 2

TOPSHOT – A Super Mario character is pictured at a Nintendo display ahead of the launch of the company’s Switch 2 console, an electronics store in the city of Nagoya, Aichi prefecture on June 2, 2025.

Richard A. Brooks | Afp | Getty Images

Nintendo arguably has the most recognizable characters in video games, from Super Mario to Pokémon.

Now, more than ever, the Japanese giant is expanding the footprint of its valuable intellectual property (IP) across movies to merchandise and theme parks, betting on nostalgia and new gamers, to drive sales of its flagship Switch 2 console and key games.

“These characters, like Mario and Pikachu, they’re obviously Nintendo’s main IP franchises, and because they are so recognizable, they have a massive appeal,” Reuben Martens, a lecturer in film and media studies at Manchester Metropolitan University, told CNBC.

In November, Nintendo President Shuntaro Furukawa laid out the company’s thinking behind the IP push.

“We believe the combination of these three elements — the core of our business being Nintendo’s unique and original entertainment, and our guiding principles of growing the Nintendo IP fanbase and fostering long-term relationships with our consumers — will drive the medium-to-long-term growth of our business and allow us to leverage our unique strengths,” Furukawa said.

Nintendo is the focus of the new episodes of my show “Built for Billions” in which I delve into the gaming giant’s console hits and flops and look at how the company is positioning itself for the future with its treasure trove of IP.

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Expansion of the Nintendo footprint

Nintendo said its Pokémon Scarlet and Pokémon Violet games for the Nintendo Switch hit an all-times sales record for the company. Pokémon is one of Nintendo’s longest-running and most popular franchises.

Guillaume Payen | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

The movies and themes parks instead play a key role in driving fans towards Nintendo’s core gaming products while also attracting new players.

For example, The Super Mario Bros Movie in 2023 gave Nintendo a short-term profit boost even as the original Switch console was six years old. This allowed Nintendo to extend the life of the console and helped turn the Switch into the gaming giant’s best-selling device of all time.

Nintendo entered the home console market with the Famicom in Japan in 1983, which became the NES internationally in 1985. So it’s been around for a long time and several generations of players have interacted with its games and consoles.

That nostalgia element has been key in the company’s continued momentum and its leveraging its key brands to play into that.

“Nintendo has been able to foster that Disney feel through this really powerful harnessing of nostalgia and also, I think accessibility — the fact that you can go in and immediately engage with these characters without prior knowledge,” Martens said.

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