Rayark's enduring rhythm epic finally escapes the touchscreen prison and lands on Nintendo's home hardware in 2027, courtesy of ports from Flyhigh Works and Esquadra. Over 18 million mobile downloads and a library exceeding 500 tracks spanning Japanese and Taiwanese artists make this more than a simple port; the Switch and Switch 2 versions promise fresh songs, new characters, and the full chaotic border-line tapping mechanics that defined the series. Timed with the tenth anniversary of VOEZ, a Switch launch title itself, the announcement threads nostalgia through the future virtual world of cyTus where a mysterious DJ named Æsir shatters connection records at a massive virtual festival.

Community whispers on forums and social feeds reveal years of quiet longing for console access, with fans lamenting storage hogs and subscription costs on phones while craving bigger screens and controller precision for the Chaos difficulty runs. Rayark's signature blend of striking visuals and immersive soundtracks, honed across DEEMO and VOEZ, translates here into a story that blurs real and virtual lives, inviting players to chase perfect timing amid escalating note patterns that mirror the music's pulse. No half-measures: the ports inherit the mobile catalog intact before layering anniversary expansions that could finally let console rhythm devotees chase Million Master without finger-fatigue excuses.

The teaser teases refined controls and broader difficulty ladders from Easy to Chaos, ensuring newcomers and veterans alike can sync with the beat without needing a touchscreen's exacting taps. This is the kind of quiet victory for long-tail series that rewards patience over hype cycles, landing just as Nintendo's next hardware cycle begins to mature. Whether the new tracks deepen Æsir's legend or simply pad the playlist, the move cements Rayark's place in the rhythm pantheon beyond mobile confines.