Skip to main content

Nintendo plans to release five smartphone games by 2017, with the first coming this year

nielsen app usage report 2014 nintendo mobile games
Image used with permission by copyright holder
When Nintendo announced in March that it had partnered with DeNA to bring games to mobile devices featuring its characters and other IP, gamers were understandably skeptical about what the end result would be. While we can’t say anything for certain until we actually see some of those games, it seems that Nintendo is taking this new strategy very seriously.

In a briefing today following up on yesterday’s report on the company’s earnings in 2014, Nintendo president Satoru Iwata said that the company plans to release five smartphone games by 2017. As was previously hinted at, the first of these games will be coming later this year.

Recommended Videos

“You may think it is a small number,” Iwata said, “but when we aim to make each title a hit, and because we want to thoroughly operate every one of them for a significant amount of time after their releases, this is not a small number at all and should demonstrate our serious commitment to the smart device business.”

Please enable Javascript to view this content

As the company has already said, it won’t be porting existing titles to phones, but will instead focus on games that better fit smartphones as a platform.

“Even with highly popular IP, the odds of success are quite low if consumers cannot appreciate the quality of a game,” Iwata said. “Also, if we were simply to port software that already has a track record on a dedicated game system, it would not match the play styles of smart devices, and the appropriate business models are different between the two, so we would not anticipate a great result”

Iwata also reiterated that Nintendo and DeNA would be creating an “integrated membership service” that is meant to establish “a bridge between smart devices and dedicated game systems.” Devices that will utilize this service include smartphones, PCs, the Nintendo 3DS, and the upcoming NX console.

Near the end of the briefing, Iwata also touched on yesterday’s announcement that Nintendo and Universal have reached a “basic agreement” to deploy Nintendo rides and attractions at Universal theme parks.

And yesterday also saw other good news for Nintendo: The firm posted its first annual profit in four years.

Kris Wouk
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kris Wouk is a tech writer, gadget reviewer, blogger, and whatever it's called when someone makes videos for the web. In his…
Green Day’s ‘demastered’ Dookie is coming to Game Boy and more ’90s toys
A gray Game Pak Game Boy cartridge with Green Day's dookie cover on it.

Green Day is celebrating the 30th anniversary of its seminal punk album Dookie by re-releasing tracks, although not in the way you'd think.

The band has partnered with Los Angeles-based art studio Brain for Dookie Demastered, which takes tracks you love and puts them on retro, sometimes completely inaccessible and unplayable, objects. Since this is the Digital Trends gaming section, we're going to talk about how they put Welcome to Paradise on a Game Boy cartridge.

Read more
Red Dead Redemption coming to PC 14 years after its release
John Marston standing and talking with a woman with a rifle on his back.

Red Dead Redemption, the open-world RPG that kicked off the now classic Western franchise, is coming to PC for the first time since it launched over 14 years ago.

Rockstar Games announced that both Red Dead Redemption and its zombie standalone title Undead Nightmare will be coming to Steam, Epic Games Store, or the Rockstar Store on October 29 in one package. Players will also get bonus content from the Game of the Year edition, although the studio didn't specify details. The project comes from Rockstar and port and remaster studio Double Eleven.

Read more
Palworld is coming to mobile despite Nintendo lawsuit
A Tocotoco in Palworld.

Palworld will continue its global dominance thanks to a new partnership with PUBG: Battlegrounds publisher Krafton, which hopes to bring the popular survival game to mobile.

Krafton announced the deal on Wednesday, saying that it wouldn't be just porting the game to mobile. Rather, it will be reinterpreting it for mobile platforms through a licensing agreement. PUBG Studios, a subsidiary of Krafton that is the main team behind PUBG: Battlegrounds, will be handling development.

Read more