- One content creator has stated that Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 and Halo: The Master Chief Collection could come to Nintendo Switch 2
- A PS5 port is also supposedly on the cards
- Although Microsoft has released games on other platforms recently, this seems unlikely.
A prominent Nintendo YouTuber has suggested that Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 and Halo: The Master Chief Collection could land on Nintendo Switch 2 and PS5 in the future.
This comes from content creator ‘NateTheHate’, who accurately leaked some game reveals in the past. Speaking on the ‘Nate the Hate Podcast’, they claimed that they “have heard” that “Flight Simulator (presumably referring to the recently released Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024, and Halo: The Master Chief Collection) It will also come to PS5 and Nintendo Switch 2.”
yes of course
This wouldn’t be the first time Microsoft has published games that come to platforms outside of its Xbox and PC ecosystem. In addition to Xbox and PC, Penitence, Sea of Thieves, Punished, and Hifi fever They are all available on Nintendo Switch and PS5. Late last year, Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer also stated that Microsoft will release more Xbox games on other platforms and that there were no “red lines” about what those might be.
Still, I wouldn’t put much stock in these claims. TO Halo: The Master Chief Collection The port seems plausible, but I find it hard to believe that Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 I would also take the leap. A PS5 port could be on the cards, but I seriously doubt the Nintendo Switch 2 has the hardware specs to support such an intensive title.
Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024 It pushes even the Xbox Series S to its absolute limits and requires hundreds of gigabytes of storage space to play. Even if the Nintendo Switch 2 could run the game at an acceptable level, I don’t think it would ship with enough storage capacity to even hold a full installation, as Nintendo has a way of keeping costs down by doing this.
Of course, Microsoft could still release a fully streamed ‘cloud version’ of the title, but that doesn’t seem likely given that it hasn’t taken that kind of approach before. We’ll have to wait and see how Microsoft will support the console when it finally arrives.