Diablo 4 still has no announced Nintendo Switch 2 version, but another rating-board entry has renewed the case for a possible port.

Nintendúo reports that Diablo IV: Lord of Hatred has appeared in Taiwan's game rating database for Nintendo Switch 2. The listing follows an earlier Indonesia Game Rating System entry spotted in April, which Nintendo Everything said named Nintendo Switch rather than Switch 2 and was attached to the Lord of Hatred expansion instead of only the base game.

That does not make a Switch 2 release official. Rating-board entries can surface before announcements, but they can also be incomplete, outdated or tied to plans that change before launch. Blizzard has not announced Diablo 4 for Nintendo Switch 2, and the current evidence still sits in rumor territory.

Why the Switch 2 rating is getting attention

The timing is what gives the rating weight. Lord of Hatred launched on April 28, 2026, with Blizzard's own pre-launch post noting that the expansion requires the Diablo IV base game, an internet connection and a Battle.net account. If the reported Taiwan listing is accurate, it suggests Blizzard has at least taken steps to classify the expansion for Nintendo's newer hardware.

There is also prior context from Blizzard itself. Former Diablo boss Rod Fergusson told Gamertag Radio in 2025, as reported by VGC, that there was "opportunity" for Diablo 4 on Switch 2, while adding that the harder issue was making the live-service side work well on a handheld often used away from a constant connection.

The online requirement remains the biggest practical question. Diablo 4 is an online action RPG, and Blizzard's official Lord of Hatred materials underline the need for internet access and a Battle.net account. A Switch 2 version would bring Diablo 4 to Nintendo players after Diablo 3 and Diablo 2: Resurrected reached the original Switch, but it would also need to fit a platform many people use partly for portable play.

The reported rating lands while Diablo 4 is already in a busy post-expansion stretch. Blizzard recently laid out more live-game changes, including a Diablo 4 patch 3.1 PTR that reworks Mythic Uniques, so a Switch 2 port would arrive into an active service rather than a quiet back-catalog release.

Until Blizzard or Nintendo says something directly, Diablo 4 on Switch 2 remains an unconfirmed port with more evidence behind it than it had a few months ago.