| Section | Content Example | |---------|----------------| | Newest releases | Game name + Title ID + version + region | | Updates (UPD) | v1.0.1 → v1.2.0 patch links | | DLC | All downloadable content packs | | Base game NSP | Full game installation file | | Special notes | Firmware requirement, required signatures |
✅ Useful for: Checking if a specific update/DLC exists before downloading elsewhere.
⚠️ Not useful for: Direct “one-click” play – requires a hacked Switch and installation via Tinfoil, DBI, or Awoo.
The "Nintendo Switch NSP List" is more than a download queue; it is a raw look at the plumbing of the Switch operating system. It forces the user to become a sysadmin, managing version numbers, title IDs, and file compression. Current Page- Nintendo Switch NSP List
While the official eShop offers a seamless, frictionless experience, the NSP list offers control. It allows for the preservation of games that have been delisted, the archiving of updates for offline play, and the consolidation of libraries. However, that control comes at the cost of complexity, requiring a literacy in file structures that the average consumer never needs to learn.
For a serious Switch librarian, a proper "current page" looks like this. Below is a demonstration of how a legal NSP list is organized. (Note: This is a limited sample for structural education.) | Section | Content Example | |---------|----------------| |
| Title Name | Title ID | Base Version | Required FW | Size (GB) | Status | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Super Mario Wonder | 0100F0C012A1C000 | v1.0.0 | 17.0.0 | 5.2 | Installed | | Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom | 0100F2C0115B6000 | v1.2.1 | 16.0.3 | 16.3 | Update Ready | | Metroid Prime Remastered | 0100123012348000 | v1.0.0 | 15.0.0 | 7.1 | Installed | | Pikmin 4 | 0100F2G0115B8000 | v1.0.1 | 16.0.0 | 9.4 | DLC Missing |
Let’s be honest: there is something mesmerizing about seeing a perfectly formatted spreadsheet listing every Switch title. From Breath of the Wild to the latest indie hidden gem. These lists often include: ✅ Useful for: Checking if a specific update/DLC
For collectors, maintaining a "1:1" library is a dopamine hit. For players, it’s about convenience—having offline backups of physical carts you already own.
The era of manually typing out "Current Page: Nintendo Switch NSP List" into a text file is over. Modern users leverage software like Switch Library Manager or Nut (used with tinfoil) to:
You do not need to search the web for someone else's list. You can generate a perfectly accurate "Current Page" directly from your Nintendo Switch using homebrew tools.