getting more new Nintendo games is better than getting less.
quality > quantity nigger
how have you so quickly forgotten the massive droughts the 3DS and Wii U went through when both were out? Do you not remember 2014-16 when all we got was dog shit on one platform or another because Nintendo was stretched thin trying to accommodate both platforms and make up for the 3rd party support they lost with the Wii U?
Almost every single first-party game released in 2016 for both platforms was deemed universally dogshit or from a smaller series when it released.
- Mario and Luigi Paper Jam was a desperate crossover that sold like shit and squandered its concept
- Fire Emblem Fates was a rip-off with a horrible story
that I still like fuck you and, as far as I'm aware, is the worst-received title in the series
- Hyrule Warriors was a spin-off
- Mario & Sonic was a spin-off
- Pokémon Rumble World was a mobile game disguised as a 3DS game + a spin-off
- Mario Party Star Rush was a post-8 Mario Party title
- Mario Maker 3DS was a terrible port that killed half the reason to play the game and ran like ass
- Pokémon Sun and Moon were well-received at the time, but still had vocal criticism against them and are now considered "part of the downfall" by many
The only arguably well-received title was Kirby: Planet Robobot, which came out of nowhere and released within like 3 months of its announcement. The entire fucking year sucked ass for the company
and I still remember it vividly because I was so confused by that. I was having enough fun with Pokémon, Fates, and Kirby that I didn't care lol.
2014-15 were only marginally better, with 2015 sucking major ass for the Wii U (god forbid we forget Amiibo Festival) but being a little better for the 3DS (only a little. It was mostly spin-offs and quality third-party, still) and 2014 being the opposite of that (3DS' only notable title was a pair of Pokémon remakes, meanwhile Wii U got a new Smash Bros, Mario Kart, Zelda spin-off, Mario spin-off, Wii Fit, Wii Sports).
Anyways, my point is- even the Switch's weakest years have been nowhere near as bad as the Wii U/3DS', partially due to the huge 3rd party support and partially due to the fact that even the worst years still have quite a few quality original titles in them. 2018 had Smash Ultimate and WarioWare Gold (as well as a bunch of cool first-or-second party ports like Bayonetta, Tropical Freeze, and Katamari Damacy), 2021 had Metroid Dread and Bowser's Fury, etc.