The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time is officially being remade for Nintendo Switch 2, with Nintendo setting a 2026 launch window for one of its most closely watched Zelda revivals.
Nintendo announced the remake during its Nintendo Direct presentation on Tuesday, The Verge reported. The company kept the reveal short. It confirmed the platform, the year, and little else.
“The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time will be reborn on Nintendo Switch 2 in 2026. #NintendoDirect”
Nintendo of America, June 9, 2026
That wording matters. Nintendo did not describe the project as a remaster, an enhanced port, or a simple visual update. It called it “reborn,” while saying more details will arrive “in the future.”
Nintendo confirms Ocarina of Time remake for Switch 2 in 2026
The announcement gives Nintendo Switch 2 a major Zelda title on its 2026 slate, even if the company has not yet pinned down a specific release date.
For now, the confirmed facts are narrow:
- Game: The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time remake
- Platform: Nintendo Switch 2
- Launch timing: Sometime in 2026
- Reveal venue: Nintendo Direct on Tuesday
- Next update: More details promised “in the future”
Nintendo’s restraint is classic Nintendo. The company revealed enough to ignite attention, but not enough to settle the biggest debates around scope, design, or price.
The immediate winner is the Switch 2 software story. A new version of Ocarina of Time gives Nintendo a recognizable Zelda release with decades of franchise gravity behind it. The immediate loser is certainty. Fans still don’t know whether they’re getting a full rebuild or a tighter modernization of the original.
This follows a run of Nintendo announcements and hardware-related stories across the broader tech beat, though not all are gaming-linked. XOOMAR readers tracking 2026 device timing may also want the wider context in Replaceable Battery Phones Fight the Upgrade Trap in 2026 and FCC Erases Amazon Leo's 1,616-Satellite Launch Clock, both of which show how much of this year’s tech coverage is turning on hardware roadmaps and release windows.
A classic Zelda slot after Echoes of Wisdom
The remake is the first major Zelda franchise release since 2024’s Echoes of Wisdom, which put Princess Zelda in the starring role, according to The Verge. That game followed 2023’s Tears of the Kingdom, the direct sequel to Breath of the Wild.
That recent sequence matters because Nintendo is not simply filling a gap with another new Zelda experiment. It is returning to one of the franchise’s most recognizable names and putting it on its next-generation console.
| Zelda title | Source-confirmed role in the recent run |
|---|---|
| Breath of the Wild | Preceded Tears of the Kingdom |
| Tears of the Kingdom | Released in 2023 as a direct sequel to Breath of the Wild |
| Echoes of Wisdom | Released in 2024 and starred Princess Zelda |
| Ocarina of Time remake | Announced for Switch 2 in 2026 |
Related reporting supplied with the source notes that Ocarina of Time was first released in 1998 for the Nintendo 64. That history helps explain why this reveal carries more weight than a routine catalog refresh.
XOOMAR analysis: Nintendo is threading two audiences at once. Longtime players know the name and will judge the remake against memory. Newer Switch 2 owners may know Zelda through Breath of the Wild, Tears of the Kingdom, or Echoes of Wisdom, not the Nintendo 64 original.
That split creates the central pressure on the project. A conservative remake risks feeling too small for Switch 2. A heavily altered version risks colliding with what made the original matter to the audience Nintendo is clearly trying to reach.
The source material does not confirm how Nintendo is balancing those pressures. It only confirms the remake, the platform, and the 2026 window.
Nintendo still needs to show gameplay, visuals, and how much has changed
Nintendo has not said whether Ocarina of Time on Switch 2 is being rebuilt from the ground up, visually overhauled, or modernized while keeping the original structure largely intact.
That leaves the biggest questions unanswered:
- Combat: Will Nintendo preserve the original feel or redesign encounters?
- Dungeons: Will layouts, puzzles, and pacing change?
- Camera controls: Will the remake adopt a fully modern control scheme?
- Quality-of-life features: Will navigation, menus, and saving be updated?
- Performance targets: Nintendo has not shared frame rate or resolution details.
- New content: No new areas, quests, or story additions have been announced.
- Commercial details: Pricing, preorders, special editions, and any Switch 2 bundle plans remain unconfirmed.
Those omissions are not minor. They decide whether this becomes a nostalgia-led release with sharper presentation or a defining Switch 2 reinterpretation of a Zelda classic.
Nintendo also has not said when in 2026 the game will launch. “Sometime in 2026” leaves a wide window for marketing beats, preorder timing, and possible hardware tie-ins, if Nintendo chooses to pursue them. None of those plans are confirmed.
For now, the practical takeaway is simple. The remake is real, it is coming to Switch 2, and Nintendo has chosen to reveal the project before explaining what kind of remake it actually is.
The next checkpoint is Nintendo’s follow-up. Gameplay footage, visual comparisons, and a firm release date will determine whether “reborn” means a careful restoration or a much larger swing at one of Zelda’s most famous entries.
The Bottom Line
- Nintendo has confirmed a 2026 Switch 2 remake of one of Zelda’s most influential games.
- The announcement strengthens the Switch 2’s upcoming software lineup with a major first-party title.
- Key details remain unknown, including release date, gameplay changes, visuals, and pricing.
Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.
Top comments (0)