TheNintendo Switchshot to successon the strength of fantastic new gameslikeThe Legend of Zelda: Breath of the WildandSuper Mario Odyssey. Those games established the Switch as a must-have console and, during the system’s launch window, that’s exactly what it needed.

Especially when you’re coming off the Wii U, a console that sold88.07 million fewer unitsthan its predecessor, the Wii.

Toon Link holding up the Master Sword, and Twilight Princess Link Holding the Master Sword outwards behind himself

How The Switch Cannibalized The Wii U’s Back Catalog

Those marquee games weren’t the only thing that kept the Switch going for nearly eight years. Of the top 20best-selling Switch games, five are remasters, remakes, or ports. Thenumber one best-selling gameon the Switch,Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, is an expanded port of aWii U game. The second best-selling Mario platformer on the console wasn’t the series' new entry,Super Mario Bros. Wonder, it wasNew Super Mario Bros. U Deluxe… another expanded port of a Wii U game.WonderalsotrailsSuper Mario 3D World + Bowser’s Fury which was, you guessed it, an expanded port of a Wii U game. The top 20 also includes two remasters/remakes of Pokemon games, withBrilliant Diamond & Shining Pearlat 13, and the ground-up remakesLet’s Go, Pikachu/Eeveeat 12.

As good as the new stuff on Switch was, its long lifespan was buoyed by these re-releases. This made the games that never migrated to Switch standout all the more. In fact, if Nintendo was hard-up for originals, it could build a pretty fantastic launch line-up for theSwitch 2exclusively from eagerly anticipated games that skipped the Switch.

Building A Launch Line-Up Out Of Switch Games We Never Got

The Wind Waker and Twilight Princessare two of the only first-party Wii U games that never made the leap to Switch and they also strike me as the most egregious example of Nintendo leaving money on the table. The Big N seemed to port everything it could get its hands on from the Wii U to the Switch, yet skipped over these games that had already been remastered for the Wii U. That recent upgrade meant that new ports likely would have required little additional work to get them up to modern standards. It’s a bizarre choice, but it gives the Switch 2 an easy lay-up.

Metroid Prime 2 and 3are in a similar position. The full Prime trilogy got a collected re-release on the Wii, but with Metroid Prime Remastered, Nintendo left the sequels stranded.Rumors pointed to a full Metroid Prime Switch trilogy being in developmentfor years but it just never materialized. If Nintendo is waiting to release it until 4 finally arrives, these two could end up being Switch 2 launch games.

And finally, where in the cosmos isSuper Mario Galaxy 2? WithSuper Mario 3-D All-Stars, Nintendo brought the first three 3D Mario platformers to Switch (then promptlyThanos-snapped it out of existence) but left Galaxy 2 stranded on the Wii. Some hoped that this might mean the game would get its own standalone remaster sometime down the road, but that has not been the case. As a result, it’s the only 3D Mario I’ve never played and I’d like to remedy that.

All in all, that’s a pretty good lineup. With the Wii U catalog mostly exhausted, Nintendo won’t be able to coast on rereleases like it did with the Switch. But if it keeps the console flush with strong new games, there’s still some room to keep digging in the back catalog.