Borderlands 4 Nintendo Switch 2 Release Paused

You now face a shift in plans for Borderlands 4 on Nintendo Switch 2, as Gearbox has paused work on that version. The studio has not ruled out a return, but you should not expect a release while development remains on hold.

This pause follows an earlier delay that removed the Switch 2 edition from its planned October 2025 window, which would have trailed the PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X/S launches. After the delay, updates stopped while the team focused on post-launch content, leaving no new date and clarifying why the Switch 2 version remains uncertain.

Borderlands 4's Switch 2 Release is On Hold, For Now

You now face an indefinite wait if you planned to play Borderlands 4 on Nintendo Switch 2. Take-Two has paused work on that version, and no active development team currently supports it.

A company spokesperson confirmed that the publisher redirected resources away from the Switch 2 build. The focus remains on improving the live versions of the game and delivering post-launch updates where the player base already exists.

You can also see this shift reflected in official planning documents. Take-Two removed the Switch 2 edition from its forward-looking release schedule, which signals that the port no longer has a target window.

What “paused” means in practical terms:

  • No engineers or designers actively work on the Switch 2 version
  • No internal deadline or release estimate exists
  • The project could resume, but only after higher priorities change

You should not assume the port is cancelled outright. Still, nothing suggests short-term movement.

Performance concerns likely influenced this decision. When Borderlands 4 launched on PC, many players reported unstable frame rates and stuttering, especially on mid-range hardware.

Those issues have improved through patches, but they highlight how demanding the game can be. Since Switch 2 would run the weakest hardware version, Gearbox would need extensive optimization to reach acceptable performance.

You also need to consider the business side. Take-Two’s leadership acknowledged that Borderlands 4 did not meet early sales expectations, partly due to technical problems at launch.

If projected sales do not justify the engineering cost of a new platform, pausing development becomes a rational move rather than a technical failure.

Current priorities for the franchise include:

  • Ongoing performance and stability updates
  • Feature additions like the recently released Photo Mode
  • Planned downloadable content throughout 2026

You still have a full content roadmap ahead if you already own the game. Gearbox reaffirmed two paid expansions scheduled for 2026, starting with Mad Ellie and the Vault of the Damned in Q1, followed by another story pack in Q3.

Smaller Bounty Packs will release between those expansions, giving you regular additions rather than long content gaps.

You should also note that Take-Two continues to support the Switch 2 platform in general. The company still plans to release other titles on that system, which keeps the door open for Borderlands 4 at a later date.

Key details for context:

Item Information
Release date September 12, 2025
Developer Gearbox Software
Publisher 2K
Rating Mature 17+

For now, if you want to play Borderlands 4, you will need to do so on other platforms while the Switch 2 version remains inactive.

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