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| Graviators is a gravity-based multiplayer sports game and is now available on the Nintendo Switch eShop. |
By Jon Scarr
Amico Entertainment has followed up its January New Year’s update with a new round of news. Graviators is now available on Nintendo Switch, Amico is lowering game prices across its catalogue, and Biplanes for Amico Home is slipping slightly into March with a bit more work going into it.
Graviators now available on Nintendo Switch
Graviators is now live worldwide on the Nintendo Switch eShop under the Happy Home Games label.
Graviators is a gravity-based multiplayer sports game set in space. You pilot a small pod, bend the ball’s path with your gravity field, and try to outplay the other side in compact arenas. There are two competitive modes for versus play and a cooperative survival challenge where you work together to protect your goal area.
On Nintendo Switch, you can play locally with friends in the same room or jump online. That suits the game’s roots. Amico originally worked with it under the name Space Strikers as a local multiplayer project, and it became a regular pick during in-house matches.
If you want to try it, you can search for “Graviators” directly on the Nintendo Switch eShop or find it through the Happy Home Games publisher page.
Happy Home Games price drop to $9.99 USD across platforms
The biggest change in this update isn’t a single game, but how much you’ll pay for the whole line-up.
After running a community poll on pricing, Amico is lowering the standard price of all Happy Home Games and Amico Home titles from $14.99 USD to $9.99 USD. That new price is rolling out across:
- Nintendo Switch (Americas)
- Steam
- Amico Home
Nintendo Switch owners in Europe will see the updated pricing a little later, with the change scheduled to appear on Thursday, February 26. Regional stores will show local currency equivalents based on the $9.99 USD target.
For you, this brings games like Biplanes, Evel Knievel, Finnigan Fox, and Cornhole down into a range that’s easier to treat as a smaller pick-up instead of a bigger purchase you need to plan around.
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| The Happy Landing Bundle groups Evel Knievel, Finnigan Fox, and Cornhole together at a lower combined price. |
Amico says it still plans to run occasional discounts, but the new base price is meant to be the main way to keep the catalogue within reach for more households.
If you’re looking at more than one game, the bundles still make the most sense:
- The Happy Landing Bundle on the Nintendo eShop
- The Happy Home Games Bundle on Steam
Both are set up so you only pay for games you don’t already own, which helps whether you’re starting from zero or filling in gaps in your library.
Biplanes for Amico Home arriving later than planned
On the Amico Home side, Biplanes is taking a bit longer than planned.
The original target was a late February launch for Biplanes on Amico Home. Amico now says it’s adding extra upgrades that players have asked for, which has pushed the timing back. The team expects to move into final testing by the end of February and is now aiming for a mid-March release.
If you want to play Biplanes right away, the Nintendo Switch version is already available on the eShop. If you’d rather try it through Amico Home on your existing devices, you now have a clearer idea of when to look for it.
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| Biplanes is already available on Nintendo Switch, with the Amico Home version now targeting a mid-March launch. |
Amico’s next steps in 2026
Across this update and January’s New Year message, one pattern keeps showing up. Amico is trying to let community feedback steer more of its decisions. The new $9.99 USD price point came straight out of a survey, and the Biplanes delay is tied to requests for extra features and tweaks instead of a simple date slip.
Put that beside the continued focus on Nintendo Switch, Steam, and Amico Home, and you get a good snapshot of where Amico sits right now. The company is building a small but growing library you can play on devices you already own, while its hardware plans remain in development rather than on store shelves.
If you’ve been curious about Amico but waiting to see something concrete, this mix of a new Nintendo Switch release and lower prices across the catalogue is one of the clearest signs yet of how the platform is trying to find its place in 2026.



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