Nintendo Bundles Switch OLED With Super Mario Bros. Wonder for Mario Day

You're getting a $60 game for free, essentially
Nintendo bundles Super Mario Bros. Wonder with Switch OLED at no extra cost during Mario Day.

Each year, the calendar offers small invitations to pause and play — and Nintendo has answered March 10th's unofficial Mario Day with a quiet but meaningful gesture: a Switch OLED console bundled with one of its most imaginative recent games at no added cost. The offer arrives at an unusual threshold, just before the company's next hardware generation steps into the light, making this a rare moment when the old and the new coexist in generous terms. For those who have lingered at the edge of the Switch ecosystem, the question is no longer about price — it is about timing, and what we choose to value in the waiting.

  • Nintendo is offering the Switch OLED with Super Mario Bros. Wonder and three months of Switch Online for $350 — the same price as the console alone, effectively gifting $68 in extras.
  • The deal creates real tension for undecided buyers: the Switch 2 is confirmed for later this year, making any current hardware purchase feel like a step taken just before the road changes.
  • Super Mario Bros. Wonder remains a full-price title at most retailers, so the bundle carries genuine financial weight for families and gift-givers navigating an already crowded market.
  • Nintendo is softening the transition by confirming backward compatibility — any Switch game bought today, including Wonder, will carry forward to the Switch 2 without repurchase.
  • Broader Mario Day discounts on Luigi's Mansion 2 HD, Princess Peach: Showtime, and Mario vs. Donkey Kong signal a coordinated effort to move existing library titles before the generational shift.
  • The window is finite — supplies are limited, and April 2 brings a Nintendo Direct that may reframe the entire calculus around buying into the current generation.

For Mario Day 2025, Nintendo has bundled the Switch OLED with Super Mario Bros. Wonder and a three-month Switch Online membership at the console's standard $350 price — meaning the game and subscription come at no extra charge. The offer is available now at major retailers including Walmart, Target, and Best Buy, though quantities are limited.

Super Mario Bros. Wonder, released in 2023, earned wide critical acclaim for reinventing the side-scrolling Mario formula. Its standout additions — an Elephant transformation that lets Mario interact with the environment in new ways, and Wonder Flowers that rewrite each level's physics on the fly — gave the franchise a creative jolt that still feels fresh.

The bundle's timing is layered with significance. Nintendo has confirmed the Switch 2 is coming later this year, and all existing Switch games will be playable on the new hardware through backward compatibility. A Nintendo Direct on April 2 is expected to reveal pricing, release dates, and a fuller picture of what the upgrade entails — meaning today's buyers are purchasing into a library that will travel with them.

Beyond the bundle, Nintendo is running Mario Day promotions across its 2024 catalog. Luigi's Mansion 2 HD and Princess Peach: Showtime have dropped to $40, while Mario vs. Donkey Kong falls to $30 — the lowest prices these titles have seen. Retailers are also discounting Mario merchandise, and Lego has announced a 1,972-piece Mario Kart set arriving in May as a timed exclusive.

For anyone who has hesitated at the edge of the Switch ecosystem, the bundle removes the most obvious friction: the cost of entry now includes one of the platform's best games. Whether that's enough to compel a purchase ahead of new hardware is a personal calculation — but the offer itself asks nothing extra in return.

Nintendo is sweetening the deal on its original Switch OLED console just as the company prepares to unveil its successor. For Mario Day 2025, the company has packaged the Switch OLED with Super Mario Bros. Wonder, one of the platform's most celebrated exclusives, at $350—the exact price you'd pay for the console alone.

The math is straightforward: you're getting a $60 game that still commands full retail price at most retailers, plus a three-month individual Switch Online membership worth $8, at no additional cost. It's the kind of bundle that makes sense for someone who's been on the fence about entering the Switch ecosystem, or for a parent shopping for a gift. The package is available now at major retailers including Walmart, Target, and Best Buy, though supplies are finite.

Super Mario Bros. Wonder, released in 2023, represents a creative reimagining of the side-scrolling Mario formula. Rather than simply iterating on familiar mechanics, the game introduces new power-ups—most notably the Elephant transformation, which lets Mario use his trunk to grab objects and solve puzzles—alongside Wonder Flowers that fundamentally reshape each level's rules and physics in unexpected ways. The game earned strong critical praise for its willingness to experiment within a beloved franchise.

The timing of this bundle is curious given what's coming. Nintendo has confirmed that the Switch 2 will arrive later this year and will play all existing Switch games through backward compatibility. That means any game purchased now—including Wonder—will transfer to the new hardware. The company plans to reveal more details about the successor during a Nintendo Direct presentation scheduled for April 2, which will likely include pricing, release date, and a clearer picture of what the upgrade actually offers.

For those interested in expanding a Mario collection, Nintendo is running broader Mario Day promotions across its library. Luigi's Mansion 2 HD and Princess Peach: Showtime have both dropped to $40 from their $60 launch price, while Mario vs. Donkey Kong is down to $30 from $50. These represent the lowest prices these 2024 releases have seen. Beyond games, retailers are discounting Mario merchandise and toys, and Lego has announced a new 1,972-piece Mario Kart building set arriving in May as a timed exclusive.

The bundle essentially removes one barrier to entry for potential Switch owners: the upfront cost of both hardware and software. Whether that's enough to move significant numbers before the Switch 2 arrives remains to be seen. But for someone who wants to play Wonder now rather than wait for the new console, or who simply prefers the existing library, the offer is straightforward. You're not paying extra for the game. You're just getting it.

Super Mario Bros. Wonder earned a 9/10 in critical review for its imaginative take on the classic platformer formula
— GameSpot review
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why bundle the Switch OLED with Wonder specifically, and why now?

Model

Wonder is probably the best exclusive Mario game on the platform—it's the one that shows what the Switch can do creatively. And Mario Day is the obvious hook. But the timing is strange because everyone knows Switch 2 is coming in a few months.

Inventor

Does that hurt the bundle's appeal?

Model

Not necessarily. Some people don't want to wait. Some people want to play Wonder on the hardware it was designed for. And backward compatibility means you're not locked into the old console—the game goes with you.

Inventor

So this is really for people who've been sitting on the fence?

Model

Exactly. It removes the friction of buying both the console and a game separately. You get a complete package at a price that feels fair.

Inventor

What about collectors or people who already own a Switch?

Model

They're not the target here. This is for newcomers. The bundle only works if you don't already have the hardware.

Inventor

And if someone waits for Switch 2?

Model

They'll likely pay more for the console itself, and Wonder will still be $60. So the bundle is actually the better deal if you want to play now.

Quer a matéria completa? Leia o original em GameSpot ↗
Fale Conosco FAQ