KEY POINTS
  • The Nintendo Switch went on sale in China on Tuesday, after working with Tencent to bring the console to that market.
  • Around 11:30 p.m. China time on Monday, 105,000 people had made a reservation to buy the console on e-commerce site JD.com, while another platform Fenqile, reported strong demand.
  • Shares of Nintendo were up over 2.5% on Tuesday, hitting their highest intraday level since May 18, 2018.
  • While Nintendo faces challenges in trying to win over the Chinese consumer which has grown up on a diet of free-to-play mobile games, analysts say the Japanese firm has a "fighting chance."
People play games on Nintendo Switch during the 2019 China Digital Entertainment Expo & Conference (ChinaJoy) at Shanghai New International Expo Center on August 3, 2019 in Shanghai, China.

The Nintendo Switch could become the biggest console in China in the next few years, analysts told CNBC, but it faces challenges in a market that loves free-to-play mobile games and may not move the needle for the company's business in the near term.

The Japanese gaming firm's flagship console officially went on sale in China on Tuesday. Nintendo worked with Chinese gaming giant Tencent to bring the console to that market.