


Survival Kids developers on the 'pressure' of making a Nintendo Switch 2 exclusive launch title
Jun 04, 2025 am 09:02 AMThe Nintendo Switch 2 is almost here, and the excitement is ramping up. With the likes of Mario Kart World and Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster available on day one, there’s going to be no shortage of great games to play when you get the shiny new system out of the box. Still, there’s one interesting Nintendo Switch 2 exclusive that might have snuck under your radar up to this point.
I’m referring to Survival Kids, a colorful co-op adventure revealed in the Nintendo Switch 2 Direct. If the name sounds somewhat familiar, it’s because it’s a revival of a largely forgotten series that started life all the way back in 1999 on the Game Boy Color. The first entry spawned a Japan-exclusive sequel but eventually transformed into the much more widely known Lost in Blue series of games on the Nintendo DS and Wii.
Published by franchise owner Konami, this new revival is being developed by Unity, the creators of the hugely popular game engine, in what might seem like quite an unlikely collaboration. Last week I had the chance to try out the game on Nintendo Switch 2 hardware at Konami Europe HQ and chat to some of the guiding voices behind it.
You may like- Nintendo Switch 2 launch games: The games you'll be able to buy and play on June 5
- Upcoming Switch 2 games for 2025 and beyond
- Nintendo Switch 2 vs Nintendo Switch: comparing price, specs, design, features and more
Lost at sea
First and foremost, I wanted to find out why now was the time to bring back such a dormant franchise. “That goes back to how Konami and Unity met,” begins Konami’s Richard Jones, creative director of Survival Kids. “I was looking for an external studio to reinvent an old Konami IP. Unity was looking to do their first end to end development project.”
Members of the two teams first met at Gamescom, with conversations on which old games might be best to bring back. “Obviously Konami has a massive warehouse full of IP that goes back a long, long way,” he continues. “But there was something about Survival Kids. I remember playing it when it first came out, and really enjoyed it.”
Set in a semi-open desert island world, the original Survival Kids challenges the player to manage their hunger, thirst, and fatigue by crafting items and scavenging food from their surroundings. This, Jones argues, is a concept ripe for expansion and reinvention.
“I also really enjoyed the theme of it, the idea of the desert island, the idea of kids shipwrecked without their parents, and those ideas of childhood adventures and that sort of thing,” he says. “It just seemed, thematically, like a really interesting canvas to work with, you've got so much potential. There are so many examples in literature, as well in popular culture, of shipwrecks and desert islands.”
One of the biggest departures from the original Survival Kids is the revival’s much more casual, predominantly co-op focus. According to Jones, this was a priority from day one: “We started with that template of wanting this to be a multiplayer game, a co-op game, that will be something that people of any skill level and any generation could play together.
“We had this image of parents playing with kids, brothers and sisters playing together, friends and family. So that was the core of what we wanted to do, and the game got built around that because we realized that if you're trying to make a social game that’s about bringing people together and everyone having a good time, it needs to be a certain type of game. It needs to be a game that's fun to play and easy for anyone to get into.”
Pick up and play
The decision to pursue co-op informed almost every aspect of the game’s design. The upcoming Survival Kids has colorful, cute visuals, with a shiny, almost plastic look that feels reminiscent of the 3D animation in modern kid’s TV shows.
“I think it also changed the tone of the game. The Game Boy Color game is quite serious in tone,” explains Jones. “It's a child on an island that can die. It has a dark tone to it, whereas we wanted this to be more friendly and more evocative of those childhood adventures, you know, the Lost Boys from Peter Pan.” At its core, it’s a game about “kids having an adventure and having a good old time, rather than the risk of dying from thirst.”
In addition to offering split-screen local co-op, Survival Kids takes full advantage of the Nintendo Switch 2 exclusive GameShare feature. This allows you to share your game with nearby friends at the click of a button, even those playing on an original Nintendo Switch. It sounds like a simple idea, especially if you’re used to using features like DS Download Play, but its implementation is actually quite complex and very technically demanding.
“GameShare you can think of as an extension of split screen, right? So with split screen, you have to render two cameras, one for player one, and one for player two, and you're giving the machine a lot more workload to do that,” explains Dennison. “You have to process most things twice. What then happens with GameShare is that that second view actually gets compressed and sent over to either another Switch 2 or Switch console.
“We actually pushed that even further, we added three players, so we're doing it three times. Three cameras, and we have to do three completely different audio mixes as well, and that requires the capability and power of this new platform. You simply couldn't do that [on Nintendo Switch]. But the end result for the player is that they can, with a single copy of Survival Kids and as long as they've got another Switch lying around, immediately start playing. It's really great. You're not having to do any downloads, any setup. You press a button and you're playing as a guest player. It's as easy as a split screen.”
For the team at Unity, Survival Kids also doubles as something of a showcase of the company’s in-house engine intended to demonstrate its capabilities to other potential Nintendo Switch 2 developers. “It was great to be able to use Survival Kids, which is completely built by Unity internally, our first game we've ever done, as a production validation case to prove that Switch 2 was ready for every other Unity developer,” reveals Dennison.
“I want [other teams] to think that Unity is already capable of running on Nintendo Switch 2. So if they want to bring their game, they can do so right now. This is built with an unmodified version of Unity. It's not some special version we've got internally, this is the version that's available to [them].”
Will we see a wave of Nintendo Switch 2 games built on Unity taking full advantage of platform-exclusive features like GameShare? Only time will tell, though given the console’s expected popularity I wouldn’t be surprised if developers will be watching a game like Survival Kids closely when it launches the same day as Nintendo Switch 2 on June 5.
The above is the detailed content of Survival Kids developers on the 'pressure' of making a Nintendo Switch 2 exclusive launch title. For more information, please follow other related articles on the PHP Chinese website!

Hot AI Tools

Undress AI Tool
Undress images for free

Undresser.AI Undress
AI-powered app for creating realistic nude photos

AI Clothes Remover
Online AI tool for removing clothes from photos.

Clothoff.io
AI clothes remover

Video Face Swap
Swap faces in any video effortlessly with our completely free AI face swap tool!

Hot Article

Hot Tools

Notepad++7.3.1
Easy-to-use and free code editor

SublimeText3 Chinese version
Chinese version, very easy to use

Zend Studio 13.0.1
Powerful PHP integrated development environment

Dreamweaver CS6
Visual web development tools

SublimeText3 Mac version
God-level code editing software (SublimeText3)

Hot Topics

When it comes to the MagSafe power bank marketplace, it's largely a sea of sameness. Not this one. Kuxiu's S2 stands apart with its semi-solid state battery technology that promises enhanced safety and longevity, albeit at a steeper price than conven

Only the best PS5 games will give you top-tier experiences on Sony's current-gen console. Now that we're well into the lifecycle of the PlayStation 5, the library is more expansive than ever, offering an enormous range of games to get stuck into, no

In iOS and iPadOS, Apple includes a built-in screenshot feature that also provides you with the ability to capture an entire webpage on your iPhone or iPad that you can then save or share with someone as a PDF document.By converting full?page screens

In macOS, Apple allows you to share Tab Groups in Safari with colleagues, friends, and family. Keep reading to learn how it's done.Introduced back in macOS Monterey, Tab Groups are designed to make organizing and preserving open tabs more manageable

The best fighting games are designed to put your skills to the test, whether that's in an online match or couch co-op. These games could offer anything from an eclectic roster of characters, a high skill ceiling to test the might of competitively min

The best PS4 games are still well worth playing, even if you're the owner of a PS5. Given that we can all still enjoy the best of the PS4 library on a PS5 too, the selection of experiences the console provides is still as accessible as ever. From gri

With iOS 18.4, Apple added support for robot vacuums to HomeKit, and some of the companies that make robot vacuums have started offering products with Matter integration. Matter-compatible robot vacuums can be added to HomeKit and controlled via Siri

We've finally gotten an announcement for the next State of Play event of the year, and it'll focus on an upcoming PS5 looter shooter. Better yet, there's not long to wait at all.Since the series of shows began in 2019, Sony has used the State of Play
