If you missed the Switch 2 at launch — or spent the better part of June refreshing retailer pages like it was your job — breathe easy: Amazon is now openly selling Nintendo’s next-gen handheld without the awkward “invite” dance. The console that was shockingly hard to grab during its June debut is, at least for now, sitting on Amazon’s virtual shelf for anyone with a card and an account.
When Nintendo launched the Switch 2 on June 5, 2025, demand slammed into supply. The company itself called the opening days “record-breaking,” reporting that more than 3.5 million units moved in the first four days — a blistering start that immediately made the machine scarce at many online stores. That scarcity translated into sold-out preorders, tiny restocks that vanished within minutes and a cottage industry of scalpers and snooping bots.
By the time Nintendo tallied another snapshot of its early performance, the company and analysts were pointing to roughly six million units sold within the first seven weeks — the kind of number that makes retailers sweat and buyers desperate. That sales surge is exactly why being able to buy a console without an invitation feels like a small, delightful miracle to many.
Amazon wasn’t on the launch-stage list in June. Reporting from Bloomberg painted the picture: Nintendo and Amazon hit a rough patch over unauthorized third-party listings and price undercutting on Amazon’s marketplace, and Nintendo reportedly pulled or withheld some of its official listings in the U.S. while the two sides hashed things out. Neither company offered the public a long, detailed accounting at the time, but industry watchers pointed to the dispute as the reason Amazon missed the initial rush.
Both Nintendo and Amazon later issued statements that downplayed a full-on fight, but the absence was visible: other big-box retailers carried stock during launch windows that Amazon did not. Whether the split was a public posture or a private negotiation tactic, it had real effects for shoppers who expected the retail giant to be their first port of call.
Amazon’s live product pages list the standalone Nintendo Switch 2 and a Mario Kart World bundle. The standalone is listed at $449 and the Mario Kart bundle at $499, numbers that match the pricing Nintendo and other retailers have used since launch. Some product pages are tagging purchases with limits — for example, one unit per customer — a common anti-scalper measure that retailers roll out when demand still outstrips supply.

Nintendo Switch 2 availability has improved, with Amazon now selling both the standard version and bundle.
A practical note: product pages and purchasing flows can change quickly. Some retailers have used invitation systems (where you register interest and wait for an email invite to buy); Amazon appears to have removed that obstacle for the listings currently live. If you care about getting one, check the listing closely for seller details — “sold and shipped by Amazon” still tends to be preferable to third-party marketplace sellers if you want warranty security and straightforward returns.
For buyers, open availability on Amazon is a relief — but not an unequivocal bargain. Nintendo’s pricing has been firm, and early software bundles (Mario Kart World being the headline) have been a popular add-on for buyers who want the full experience out of the box. If you only want the console, the $449 base option is the clearest route; if you want a plug-and-play family racer, the $499 bundle bundles in the game download and cuts a small chunk off buying the game and hardware separately.
For Nintendo, the episode is textbook supply-and-brand control. The company has been merciless about protecting MSRP on games and accessories; when third-party sellers undercut that pricing, Nintendo’s options are blunt: push distributors to limit channels, withhold listings, or try to force platform-level fixes. For Amazon and other marketplaces, the lesson is about balancing open platforms with brand partners that want price integrity. The tug of war is likely to keep surfacing as hot-ticket hardware launches continue to challenge inventory and distribution norms.
Nintendo’s launch proved two things: demand for a well-executed, familiar-but-upgraded handheld still exists in force; and in a world of global marketplaces, controlling price and distribution is an ongoing strategic headache. Amazon’s return to openly selling the Switch 2 removes a practical friction for consumers — but it doesn’t change the larger story of manufacturers, marketplaces and the thin line between available stock and empty “notify me” buttons.
If you want one today, Amazon may now be the easiest — just be ready for stock to ebb and flow until supply comfortably outpaces the exceptional early demand.
Disclaimer: Prices and promotions mentioned in this article are accurate at the time of writing and are subject to change based on the retailers’ discretion. Please verify the current offer before making a purchase.
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