Banjo Kazooie is coming to Nintendo Switch Online, but there’s a better place to play it

The bird and the bear are better elsewhere

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Nintendo has revealed that Banjo Kazooie – Rare’s classic N64 platformer which debuted in 1998 – is coming to theNintendo Switch Online Expansion Packservice in January 2022.

It’s the second N64 title to be added to Nintendo’s premium subscription tier since it arrived in October, withPaper Mariodue to release on December 10, 2021.

Banjo Kazooie will likely run at the same resolution and frame rate as other N64 titles on the service: 720p at 30fps, and will also support the Switch’s suspend and resume feature, which lets you create multiple save points.

Guh-huh! Head to Spiral Mountain when Banjo-Kazooie joins the Nintendo 64 games line-up available to #NintendoSwitchOnline + Expansion Pack members in January! pic.twitter.com/496oP2qWAiDecember 10, 2021

However, even though it’s great to see one of theN64’s best titlescome to Nintendo’s new service, there’s a better way to play Banjo Kazooie right now, and for significantly less money.

As a result ofMicrosoftbuying Rare back in September 2002, Banjo Kazooie has been available on Xbox consoles for quite some time. The game runs at a resolution of4KonXbox Series XandXbox One X, 1440p onXbox Series S, and 1080p onXbox OneandXbox One S– which is noticeably higher than the 720p output on Switch.

Banjo Kazooie also supports Xbox achievements, and the game can be played via Xbox Cloud Gaming on your mobile device if you haveXbox Game Pass Ultimate. Xbox Series X and Xbox Series S owners will benefit fromAuto HDRsupport, too, if they have a compatible display.

Banjo Kazooie is, like all first-party Microsoft games, available onXbox Game Pass.Xbox Game Passis only $9.99 / £7.99 / AU$10.95 a month, which means you can play both Banjo Kazooie and the game’s sequel, Banjo-Tooie, for significantly less than the price of a year’s Nintendo Switch Online Expansion Pack, which costs $49.99 / £34.99 / AU$59.95. No monthly subscription option is available for the Nintendo Switch Online Expansion Pack.

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Alternatively, you could pick up a copy of Rare Replay, which includes both Banjo games as well as 28 other Rare classics like Conker’s Bad Fur Day, for less than $20 / £20. Obviously, that’s not an option for Xbox Series S owners, as the console doesn’t have a disk drive.

Analysis: Nintendo’s N64 library is growing, but far too slowly

Analysis: Nintendo’s N64 library is growing, but far too slowly

Once Banjo Kazooie arrives in January 2022, there will be 11 N64 games available for subscribers to play on the Nintendo Switch Online Expansion Pack service. That’s a paltry amount compared to what other subscription-based services offer, like Xbox Game Pass andPlayStation Now, which grant users access to hundreds of titles to download and play from day one.

Games are frequently added to both Microsoft andSony’s services, too, which often gives subscribers new titles to enjoy every month.

However, Nintendo’s biggest problem with its online services, including its NES and SNES library of games, is the glacial speed that new titles are added over time. It means subscribers can often be left waiting months, if not years for some of their favorite N64 titles to arrive, if at all. For the price Nintendo is charging, it needs to do more.

Adam was formerly TRG’s Hardware Editor. A law graduate with an exceptional track record in content creation and online engagement, Adam has penned scintillating copy for various technology sites and also established his very own award-nominated video games website. He’s previously worked at Nintendo of Europe as a Content Marketing Editor and once played Halo 5: Guardians for over 51 hours for charity. He is now an editor at The Shortcut.

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