Additional classic games for NES – Nintendo Classics are now available for Nintendo Switch Online subscribers.
PAC-MAN
You control everyone’s favorite iconic PAC-MAN!
Navigate through mazes, gobbling pellets while simultaneously avoiding the devious ghosts. Warp from one edge of the maze to the other using the warp tunnels, or eat a Power Pellet to turn the tables and make the ghosts vulnerable! In order to clear the stage, you’ll need to eat all the Pac-Dot pellets in the maze! See just how far you can get through the stages before losing all your lives! Fruit, like cherries and strawberries, will give you extra points to help you reach the highest score!
Mendel Palace
Flip panels to defeat enemies and rescue Candy!
This action game was released for the NES™ console in 1990 and features the protagonist Bon-Bon, whose best friend, Candy, has been trapped inside her own dream! To save Candy, he’ll need to outsmart and overpower all of Candy’s evil dolls. The toys that block his path can be defeated by flipping panels in the floors, pushing them into the walls. Some panels also have special effects that can be used to clear stages even more quickly!
THE TOWER OF DRUAGA
Control GIL, the hero, as he climbs the tower!
Starting from the first floor, pick up the key inside each maze and go through the door to advance to the next floor. To clear the game, you must defeat DRUAGA, the ruler of the tower, then advance to the top floor and save your beloved KI. Some foes need to land several hits before you lose a life—but many will kill you instantly! Failing to block a spell with your shield, touching fire, and running out of time will also cause you to lose a life. Run out of lives, the game is over. There are also secret tasks, one for each floor, that will reward you with hidden items, like a pickax that can destroy walls and boots that increase your movement speed. You will need some of these items to beat the game—missing key items will lead to certain death, or at least a dead end and a long return journey. Climb carefully!
It still amazes me how many people are perfectly fine subscribing for temporary access to a ROM library.
Edit: It’s not surprising that companies opt for subscription models to boost profitability; it’s just frustrating that rational consumers are less able to purchase products at reasonable prices because the average consumer is putting up with it.
i don’t know how it’s that amazing in 2026, considering there’s subscription models for just anything right now.
Anyway, i doubt the nintendo classics emulation is the real reason anyone subcribes to Nintendo Switch Online.
The more that people accept subscriptions, the fewer non-subscription options they will end up having.
I don’t deny that and I don’t think the subscription model is a good model. I just don’t find it as surprising anymore.



