Technology
- Home
- Technology
- News
The Switch 2’s GameShare multiplayer turns this horror game into an unexpected comedy
GameShare, a multiplayer feature that's exclusive to the Switch 2, is a neat concept that so far has mostly been used in pretty standard ways. It lets you use one copy of a game and beam it to multiple Switches, making it a great way to experience local co-op…

Published 4 months ago on Feb 13th 2026, 2:01 pm
By Web Desk

GameShare, a multiplayer feature that’s exclusive to the Switch 2, is a neat concept that so far has mostly been used in pretty standard ways. It lets you use one copy of a game and beam it to multiple Switches, making it a great way to experience local co-op titles like Survival Kids or Split Fiction. But I’ve finally found an inventive, and quite frankly bizarre, use for GameShare: turning survival horror into something more like a comedy.
Tokyo Scramble launches this week as a Switch 2 exclusive, and it’s a game that channels some of the slow, deliberate pace of genre classics like the original Resident Evil. You play as Anne, a woman who was riding a subway in Tokyo that then crashed deep into the Earth, revealing a hidden underground world full of dinosaur-like monsters. You don’t have a gun or any weapons to defend yourself. Instead, Anne’s most important tool is her smartwatch: It lets her interact with everything from escalators to turnstiles in order to distract the monsters and then sneak to safety.
In that way it’s like old-school survival horror mixed with a puzzle game, as you have to figure out how to use the environment to stay safe while dealing with new and increasingly dangerous creatures. An early boss, for example, is a giant bat with super-sensitive hearing, forcing you to stay perfectly still whenever its ears perk up. But turn on a fire alarm using your watch and that keen sense of hearing becomes a weakness.
At this point you might be asking yourself how, exactly, that kind of solitary survival experience could work as a multiplayer game. And the answer is pretty unexpected. Using GameShare, you can play Tokyo Scramble with up to three other people. And you all play by controlling different aspects of the same character. One player could manage Anne’s movement, for instance, while another is in charge of rotating the camera. I played through a number of levels as a two-player experience with the following setup: I was in charge of moving around the levels, while my partner handled everything else (camera, performing actions, and activating the smartwatch apps).
[Media: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WZUTIaW_krA]
This is, as you can probably imagine, a challenging way to play a video game. I kept having to say out loud that I needed the camera pointed in a specific direction so that I could actually see the dinosaurs I was trying to avoid, while my partner would snap at me to get closer to something they needed to interact with. These are all actions I intuitively perform when playing a game like this solo, but I had to really think about what I needed to do — and then vocalize it — in order to get anywhere in Tokyo Scramble. And to be clear, we didn’t get very far. Our version of Anne, controlled by two different people, kept being slaughtered by giant praying mantises with glowing red eyes. We were yelling at each other just to perform the most basic tasks, which we almost always failed to do.
The thing is, while the added challenge of playing cooperatively sucked out any of the tension or scares in the game, it did turn it into a singular experience that was actually kind of fun. It was certainly like no other multiplayer game I’d ever played before. It had a lot of the same appeal as the friendslop genre that has taken over Twitch and YouTube: The goofiness is part of what makes it work when you’re playing with a bud.
Mostly, though, Tokyo Scramble has me hoping to see more experiments like this in the Switch 2’s future. Nintendo consoles often have gimmicky features that go underutilized, like the HD rumble of the original Switch that didn’t get much use outside of a handful of titles. It’d be a shame if the same happened to GameShare. And given how many Switch consoles are out there — GameShare supports both the Switch 2 and the original Switch for sharing games — there’s a lot of potential. We just need some more out-there ideas like Tokyo Scramble.

Key clauses of the proposed U.S.-Iran Agreement revealed
- a day ago
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
Ishaq Dar and Turkish foreign minister discuss U.S.-Iran progress, express satisfaction
- a day ago

Economic stability has been achieved; government has provided relief to salaried class in the budget, says Atta Tarar
- a day ago

Women’s T20 World Cup: India wins toss and elects to bat first against pakistan
- a day ago

Terrorists based in Afghanistan pose a major threat to the entire Region: the Diplomat
- a day ago
.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
Geneva agreement ceremony between the US and Iran to be hosted by Pakistan:Shehbaz Sharif
- 10 hours ago

Trump claims US-Iran agreement finalized; maritime traffic resumes through Strait of Hormuz
- 6 hours ago

PM Shehbaz Sharif says Field Marshal played Key Role in de-escalation and peace efforts
- 10 hours ago

Memorandum includes ceasefire on all fronts including Lebanon: Ismail Baghaei
- 8 hours ago

PCB announces major changes in central contracts system
- 7 hours ago

State Bank announces new monetary policy, what Is the new interest rate?
- 8 hours ago
WEEKEND: KNICKS IN 5?
- 2 days ago
You May Like









.jpg&w=3840&q=75)



