Skip to main content

Screenshot albums and more are coming as part of a major Nintendo Miiverse update

miiverse overhaul due this summer header
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Miiverse, the player-driven community for Nintendo consoles, is due to see a number of major structural changes as part of a planned overhaul, Nintendo announced.

While the update will introduce several new features, it will also place limits to the number of times players can post or comment daily, easing the moderation process and ensuring more carefully curated game communities.

A new Screenshot Album feature will launch alongside the Miiverse software update, allowing players to save up to 100 photos captured from Wii U games. The feature serves as a private catalog for players, and saved screenshots will not be visible to others.

Users can also access the new Play Journal feature, which logs brief comments for player-chosen gameplay milestones. Games that support screenshot functionality will automatically insert gameplay photos alongside log entries. Play Journal functionality replaces Miiverse’s existing Activity Feed, which will be phased out in the coming months.

Game-specific Miiverse communities will gain a sorting feature as part of Nintendo’s forthcoming update, enabling categorization of player posts. Miiverse messages within each game’s community will be categorized as drawings, discussions, or Play Journal entries, making it easier for players to find the user-created content that they want while eliminating extraneous messages. Users can additionally tag discussion posts in order to group and sort through related content.

Nintendo notes that a server-mandated cooldown period between successive Miiverse posts will be reduced following the update. Individual players will be limited to a combined total of 30 posts or comments per day, however – a restriction that didn’t previously exist within Miiverse communities. These new rules will only apply to messages posted from the Miiverse app; in-game comments will not be restricted.

Nintendo’s Miiverse update will launch this summer. A specific rollout date was not announced.

Editors' Recommendations

Danny Cowan
Danny’s passion for video games was ignited upon his first encounter with Nintendo’s Duck Hunt, and years later, he still…
The Nintendo 3DS’ best (and weirdest) cult hit is coming to Apple Arcade
Horses race in Pocket Card Jockey.

Apple Arcade is kicking off 2023 by adding three new titles in January. Most notable among them is Pocket Card Jockey: Ride On!, a mobile port of one of the Nintendo 3DS cult hits set to launch on January 20.

The original Pocket Card Jockey, released in 2013 in Japan and 2016 in North America, is one of the 3DS' oddest titles. Developed by Pokémon studio Game Freak, it's a horse-racing RPG that revolves around solitaire. Players raise and breed horses and then race them by playing fast-paced rounds of solitaire. It's an extremely bizarre concept, but an incredibly fun one that made it one of the handheld's most charming hidden gems.

Read more
Our 5 biggest predictions for the September Nintendo Direct: Metroid, Zelda, and more
Samus gives a thumbs up in Metroid Prime.

Following months of Nintendo-related leaks and a third-party showcase in June, the second full-fledged Nintendo Direct of 2022 is finally happening. February's show had neat reveals of games like Fire Emblem Warriors: Three Hopes, Mario Strikers: Battle League, Xenoblade Chronicles 3, and Nintendo Switch Sports. Now, Nintendo Switch players hope the September 2022 Nintendo Direct will give a clear idea of what to expect throughout the rest of this year and into the first months of 2023.
Ahead of the showcase's announcements, rumors about a couple of key Nintendo classic remasters heavily circulated. There are also delayed Nintendo Switch titles that we hope finally get release dates. Although there's a chance that none of the following predictions will come to fruition tomorrow, it's still fun to guess what might pop up. As such, here are five announcements we hope to see at the September 2022 Nintendo Direct.
Metroid Prime returns

 
Metroid fans ate well last year with the release of Metroid Dread, but they've still waited since 2017 for the long-delayed Metroid Prime 4. Although there's nothing to suggest that Metroid Prime 4 will pop up here just yet, a remaster or remake of Metroid Prime seems much more likely. A Nintendo Switch version of the GameCube classic was subject to rumors for years, but rumblings of the game's existence really ramped up in 2022. 
From Giant Bomb's Jeff Grubb to prolific Nintendo leaker Emily Rogers, the more reliable parts of the gaming rumor mill say that some sort of Metroid Prime rerelease project is in the works at Nintendo. Grubb even claims that it's coming this year, so Nintendo would need to reveal it very soon if that's true. If it is real, the biggest question surrounding Metroid Prime on Nintendo Switch is just how much of a reimagining it is. Will it be an HD port, a more substantive remaster, or a from-the-ground-up remake? Hopefully, we won't have to wait much longer to find out. 
The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker and Twilight Princess get rereleased 

Read more
Nintendo Switch Sports’ first free update adds more leg strap support
Switch Sports player spiking a volleyball.

A free update coming to Nintendo Switch Sports will add a handful of new features on July 26.

https://twitter.com/NintendoAmerica/status/1550467265648361473?t=ouSojn9mdlWPms5cpXS4-A&s=19

Read more