Nintendo has temporarily suspended sales of the multilingual Switch 2 in Japan after detecting what it believes is organised hoarding, and slapped new conditions on who can buy one. As of 12 June 2026, customers must have at least 50 hours of play time on the original Switch, logged by the end of 31 May, and are limited to one console per Nintendo account, a clampdown driven by a weak yen that has made the Japanese unit cheaper than Switch 2 consoles abroad.
Why Nintendo Halted Multilingual Switch 2 Sales
Nintendo said it acted after spotting a wave of suspicious orders on its own store. “We temporarily suspended sales of the Nintendo Switch 2 (multilingual support) on the Nintendo Store after confirming several orders that appeared to be hoarding,” the company said. In a fuller statement posted to social media, it added: “To ensure we can deliver the product to as many customers as possible, we will now limit sales to customers who meet the following conditions.” Those conditions are 50 or more hours of play time on the original Switch as of the end of May, and a cap of one Switch 2 per Nintendo account.
Nintendo StoreにおけるNintendo Switch 2(多言語対応)の販売につきまして、買い占め等の疑いがある注文を複数確認しましたので、一時的に販売を停止しておりました。…
— 任天堂株式会社 (@Nintendo) June 11, 2026
Japan’s Two Switch 2 Versions
Unlike other regions, Japan has two distinct Switch 2 models. A Japanese, domestic-only version is sold widely through general retailers, while a multilingual version, which behaves like Switch 2 hardware everywhere else in the world, can only be bought directly from Nintendo on its online store. It is that multilingual model whose sales have been suspended and gated.
| Version | Price | Where to buy |
|---|---|---|
| Japan-only (domestic) | ¥59,980 ($375), up from ¥49,980 | General retailers |
| Multilingual | ¥69,980 ($435) | Nintendo online store only (now gated) |
The Yen, Scalping and a September Price Rise
The likely driver of the hoarding is currency. After a recent price increase the domestic version rose from ¥49,980 ($310) to ¥59,980 ($375), while the multilingual version held at ¥69,980 ($435), and the weak yen leaves that multilingual unit cheaper than a Switch 2 bought overseas. The gap is about to widen: from 1 September, the price of a Switch 2 in the United States rises from $449 to $499, which would leave the Japanese multilingual model around $65 cheaper at current exchange rates. Nintendo has attributed its price increases to “changes in market conditions” and its “global business outlook,” and every major console maker has announced increases in recent months amid global supply shortages and other pressures.
Nintendo has not said when unrestricted multilingual sales will resume, and with the US price rise landing on 1 September the incentive for cross-border buying, and the scalping it has fuelled, is only set to grow.
