

The Nintendo Switch 2 is launching soon, bringing free performance upgrades for over ten existing Switch titles - including the notoriously problematic Pokémon Scarlet and Violet. After a 30-minute hands-on with the enhanced Pokémon Scarlet on Switch 2 hardware, I can confirm the improvements are dramatic.
Night and Day Technical Improvements
While Nintendo's official site vaguely mentions "optimized visuals" and "improved framerates," the reality exceeds expectations. The Switch 2 version runs at a crisp 4K resolution and smooth 60FPS (though I couldn't verify frame pacing). The immediate visual upgrade is striking - no more jagged edges on terrain or Pokémon models.
The performance leap becomes especially apparent during gameplay. Flying over Casseroya Lake now showcases distant Pokémon swimming naturally, with no performance drops even during weather effects. Unlike the original Switch version that frequently struggled, rain and other environmental effects now function perfectly.
Framerate improvements are most noticeable when tracking distant objects like West Province's windmills or faraway NPCs. Raid battles and Terastalizing effects also run flawlessly - though online performance remains untested.
Radically Improved Load Times
Comparative testing reveals massive loading time reductions:
- Title Screen: 19s (Switch) → 5s (Switch 2)
- Casseroya Lake Fast Travel: 9s → 4s
- Blueberry Academy → Paldea: 17s → 5s
Menu navigation is dramatically faster too - clothing and hairstyle previews load instantly rather than forcing players to wait several seconds per selection.
More Than An Update - A Light Remaster
While I enjoyed the original despite its flaws, the Switch 2 version makes the original's technical problems impossible to ignore. The improvement is so substantial it feels closer to a light remaster than a simple optimization patch.
Though not perfect (I noticed one minor stutter while dashing and occasional texture pop-in), the enhancements are significant enough to make me suspect these games were originally developed with Switch 2 hardware in mind. For players who avoided Scarlet/Violet due to performance issues, the Switch 2 version is worth revisiting.
This bodes well for Pokémon Legends: Z-A's upcoming Switch 2 release. The free updates launch alongside the Switch 2 on June 5 - simply connect to the internet and update your system to enjoy the improvements.
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