Can games purchased digitally from the eShop with a single Nintendo Account be played on multiple Switches in a household?
I'm reading a Nintendo support article to try to understand the answer to my question, but the wording seems to contradict itself:
Here the wording implies that games purchased with a single account are playable on multiple Switches:
You can link your Nintendo Account to multiple consoles. You can play
digital games you've purchased on any Nintendo Switch console that has
been linked to your Nintendo Account.
Later, there is wording that contradicts the previous statement, indicating purchases cannot be shared:
Please note that you can register one primary console per Nintendo
Account. Once you've registered a primary console, your digital
purchases can be played by anyone that uses the primary console. Other
players will not be able to access your digital games on a non-primary
console.
Sooooo which is it?
To draw a comparison, in the case of iTunes, purchases can be downloaded on up to 5 devices. Exceeding that requires resetting the list of allowed devices. Then there is Family Sharing too. If Nintendo really does make it impossible for a family to share its purchases across multiple Switches, I can only conclude they really don't mind disincentivizing ownership of multiple Switches within a family.
Not that I plan to buy a second Switch, but I was wondering because a lot of games only offer multiplayer over a network (as opposed to shared-screen local multiplayer). Is Nintendo actually greedy enough to demand that parents buy each game for their two kids twice? (Their three kids thrice, etc…)
Also for comparison, I looked into Steam's policy. Steam does support Family Library Sharing. There are a few limitations, but basically sharing is supported.
Best Answer
Suppose that you buy a game digitally such as Overcooked, for example.
In your primary console, as long as you have downloaded the game, anyone that is logged in can play Overcooked.
In your non-primary console, two things can happen:
I used a game for an example but this is basically how this works for all games.
What this means for a household is that yes, if you want to play the same game in multiple Switches at the same time, you will need multiple purchases.
Notice that this can work differently for the NES, SNES, Genesis and Nintendo 64 games that are only accessible with a Nintendo Online subscription. If you have a family subscription, you can add up to seven other players as your family and for all purposes you all own those games, being able to play them simultaneously.
Edit: to address this point OP made in a comment:
Yes, and I think is the usual scenario for most people. My spouse and I both have the same switch as our primary console (we only have this one). We both have games we separately purchased online. When logging into another Switch, I can play my games, but not my spouse's. If we got separate Switches, and I made mine my primary and she made hers her primary, then we could still play my games on my Switch, and her games on her Switch.