**Key Differences Between Japanese & International Versions**

1. **Exclusive Access:** The Japanese version only supports Nintendo accounts registered in Japan (though region changes are allowed, making this less restrictive). 2. **Global Compatibility:** The international version welcomes accounts from all regions, including Japan. 3. **Language Lock:** The Japanese version permanently locks the system language to Japanese—no way around it.
4. **Game Language Rules:** Just like setting a Switch 1 to the Japanese region, game language depends on the title: adjustable if supported, otherwise defaults to Japanese. 5. **Region Workaround?** While unconfirmed, switching your account’s region to buy games elsewhere *might* let you play them on the Japanese version (language still follows rule #4).
6. **Store Confusion:** Nintendo’s Japanese website lists both versions, but don’t count on the international edition being in stock. 7. **Pre-Order Hurdles:** Snagging a console requires a 1-year Nintendo Online membership (non-consecutive), 50+ gameplay hours, and an active subscription at checkout.
8. **Why I Chose International:** Despite living in Japan and understanding the language, I’m shelling out 20,000 yen extra for the global version. Why? Zelda’s forced Japanese localization—RPGs drowning in katakana are my nightmare.
**For Japanese Version Buyers:** If your language skills are shaky, check if your favorite games offer in-game language options first.
___________Update (4/4)___________
**New Findings & Clarifications:** - **Cartridge Mystery:** Nintendo’s wording on overseas cartridges is hazy—officially "not guaranteed to work" (動作保証対象外), implying possible game-by-game exceptions. Stay tuned for post-launch tests. - **Digital Lockout:** Games bought from foreign eShops *definitely* won’t run on the Japanese version.
- **Travel Uncertainty:** Using the Japanese version abroad gets the same vague "no guarantee" label (保証対象外). Speculation: features like online memberships may fail outside Japan, but flight mode should work. Buying from the Japanese eShop overseas? Probably fine—though historically, Japanese credit cards were enforced for payments.
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