Only a few weeks after the release of Pokemon Legends: Z-A, fans learned that the franchise’s new cozy game, Pokemon Pokopia, is coming in early 2026. However, Pokopia will only be given a physical release as a Game-Key Card, rather than a cartridge with the full game. That’s proven to be a controversial topic among Switch 2 players, some of whom are angry enough that they claim they’ll skip Pokopia entirely.
Nintendo of Japan’s official site confirmed Pokopia’s Game-Key release, followed by an official YouTube video that used it as a Game-Key Card example, and the reaction has been swift. Unlike digital releases, fans are able to resell Game-Key cards. But for players who prefer to own the complete game on a cartridge, it’s viewed as Nintendo breaking its pledge not to publish its own games that way. The game was developed by Koei Tecmo’s Omega Force, so technically Nintendo hasn’t broken that promise. However, not everyone sees it that way.
I Will buy it by second hand if you still use key cards.
I’ve been buying all pokémon games from the last 21 years. pic.twitter.com/eEK8f5QulK— Miguel Ángel (@Mikeranjero98) November 11, 2025
They really made Pokopia the face of game key cards 💔💔 https://t.co/6W7wGRLnVt pic.twitter.com/j9fqWRitgm
— Caleb 🅱️. (@Clbgolden) November 11, 2025
Seeing people defending Pokopia. pic.twitter.com/Ryey30QhEN
— TheREALDrtre81 (@Drtre81) November 11, 2025
My honest reaction when I figure out that Pokopia is going to be a Game-key card pic.twitter.com/BjFBru0tc4
— Pokémon Daily Post💫 (@PokeDailyPost) November 12, 2025
Nintendo introduced Game-Key Cards alongside the Switch 2 in part as a way to mitigate the size restrictions of Switch 2 cartridges. The only thing on the card is a digital license that allows the player to download the game directly to their Switch 2. This differs from a digital purchase in that the Game-Key Card needs to be in the console for the game to play, but it’s also transferable to a new owner if the player who purchased it no longer wants it.
