Nintendo just pulled one of its weirder nostalgia stunts: the company announced that a curated collection of Virtual Boy games will join the Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack library, and they’ll be playable on both Switch and Switch 2 — but only if you buy a purpose-built headset accessory (or the cheaper cardboard alternative). The first of the titles will be available February 17, 2026, with the rest rolling out over time.
The Virtual Boy is one of those footnotes in gaming history: launched in 1995, it was intended as Nintendo’s first stereoscopic 3D system but was hampered by red-only graphics, a bulky design, and health/comfort concerns. It was discontinued within a year, sold in tiny numbers, and became both a punchline and a cult curiosity. Nintendo’s decision to resurrect it as a Switch accessory-plus-online collection looks like an equal parts nostalgia play and a preservation move — an opportunity to make obscure titles playable on modern hardware without shipping original units.
How it will work
- The Virtual Boy – Nintendo Classics library will be gated behind the Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack membership. You won’t be able to play the collection without that subscription.
- To run these Virtual Boy titles, you’ll need either the full plastic “replica” accessory (looks like an updated Virtual Boy cockpit) or the cardboard model that’s closer to Nintendo Labo’s approach. Nintendo lists the plastic model at $99.99 and the cardboard version at $24.99. Both accessories are intended to accept a Switch or Switch 2 console.
- The Switch Lite, however, is not compatible. Nintendo has also said the collection will initially be available only in the United States and Canada.
Nintendo’s product pages list a Feb. 17, 2026, release date for the accessory and for the start of the Virtual Boy Classics rollout — though the company is explicit that the 14-game slate will arrive “over time,” not all on day one. That staggered schedule means collectors and completionists should expect periodic drops rather than a single bundle dump. You’ll also need the Expansion Pack tier of Switch Online to access the library.
Nintendo and coverage around the Direct list 14 titles that will be added to the service — a mix of the system’s biggest names and some rarities. Reported titles include:
Virtual Boy Wario Land; Galactic Pinball; Red Alarm; Teleroboxer; Mario’s Tennis; Jack Bros.; Vertical Force; Mario Clash; Golf; Virtual Bowling; Innsmouth no Yakata; Space Invaders: Virtual Collection; V-Tetris; and 3D Tetris. Expect the usual caveat: these are the first confirmed entries and Nintendo suggested more will be added later.

A few of those standouts are worth calling out. Mario’s Tennis and Wario Land are the Virtual Boy’s nearest things to mainstream Nintendo IP on the platform; titles like Teleroboxer and Red Alarm highlight the system’s attempt at what Nintendo called stereoscopic 3D gameplay. For many players, the appeal won’t be blocky graphics so much as the chance to try games they either missed in the ’90s or could never afford as rarities.
Why Nintendo is doing this (and why it’s clever)
There are a few practical reasons this makes sense for Nintendo:
- Preservation without pushing old hardware: by re-emulating and packaging Virtual Boy titles through Online, Nintendo preserves the catalog while avoiding refurbishing a fragile, unpopular console.
- Monetization with minimal engineering: the accessory is basically lenses and a housing — the Switch supplies the compute and display — so Nintendo can sell hardware without rebuilding a full platform.
- Nostalgia and PR: it’s an attention-grabbing headline for a Direct, and for the right audience, it’s a pretty irresistible novelty.
This isn’t a risk-free throwback. The Virtual Boy originally carried health warnings (motion/visual discomfort) and Nintendo’s new pages still flag age/health considerations and recommend parental supervision for younger players. The red-monochrome aesthetic is part of the original identity — and not everyone will find the experience comfortable, especially in longer sessions. Also, region availability is limited at launch, and the requirement for the Expansion Pack plus a paid accessory adds up: by the time you buy membership and hardware, you could be looking at a nontrivial outlay for a retro fix.
If you’ve ever been curious about the Virtual Boy’s strange brand of 3D, Nintendo is offering a way to try it without hunting for a yellowing original unit and a place to plug it in. But it’s not free nostalgia — you’ll need the Expansion Pack, a compatible Switch (not the Lite), and a headset that costs money. For everyone else, it’s an intriguing cultural footnote: Nintendo turning a 30-year-old flop into a current-day accessory is the kind of odd, low-risk gamble the company specializes in.
Discover more from GadgetBond
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
