After months of back-and-forth and delays, have finally hit a major piece of gaming hardware: the , which is due to launch June 5, 2025.
It's only a delay on the pre-order not release date, but this is the first major delay of its kind in the wake of recent tariffs and likely paints a pretty dark picture about rising prices of gaming hardware in the near future.
An update from Nintendo pic.twitter.com/iygReQlBwl
Though the idea of not being able to guarantee a pre-order in the US for the Nintendo Switch 2 is certainly noteworthy, the larger picture for PC gamers is what a precedent this sets.
If you care about PC Gaming, you will likely be using a lot of non-US hardware. TSMC's largest and most up-to-date fab is based out of Taiwan, and it is the most valued chip maker in the world. We are still two years away from the that will be on 3 nm tech, and we don't yet know if this will save the next lineup of Nvidia and AMD GPUs from tariffs.
Though AMD is based in the US, its manufacturing is largely done outside of it. Intel manufactures in the US but has facilities all around the world.
These tariffs reportedly , but pc gaming hardware is more than just semiconductors, and tariffs can still hit semiconductors if [[link]] placed in devices and imported in.
Trump's tariffs also won't hit hardware that is already in the US so, if you've recently placed an order for a shiny new GPU on the way now, you should be fine.
However, if the graphics card or gaming laptop you've had your eye on suddenly can't even be pre-ordered at your favorite store, that suggests prices are about to go up. If a retailer or manufacturer's storefront does not yet have that hardware in its hands, the future looks rather bleak for any kind of consistent pricing. That is until major manufacturers have a grip on how to react to these tariffs.
Nintendo announcing a pre-order date, and then quickly pulling them over the span of a week certainly doesn't look good for other gaming hardware price-rises in the very near future.