Dragon Quest XI S Switch 2 Classification Appears in Taiwan Ahead of Dragon Quest Day

A new entry for Dragon Quest XI S: Echoes of an Elusive Age - Definitive Edition has been recorded on Taiwan’s video game classification board, listing a version for Nintendo’s next-generation hardware commonly referred to as the Nintendo Switch 2.

The listing arrives ahead of this year’s Dragon Quest Day celebration and centers on a title that Square Enix originally released on the Nintendo Switch in 2019.

Dragon Quest XI S launched for the Nintendo Switch in 2019 as the definitive edition of Dragon Quest XI, adding character-specific side stories, a new orchestral soundtrack and other content to the base game.

The property is part of Square Enix’s long-running Dragon Quest franchise, a cornerstone of Japanese role-playing games created by Yuji Horii and produced by Square Enix.

The Taiwan classification entry is a public, verifiable record that indicates the game has been submitted for regional age-rating review on a platform listed as Switch 2.

Classification listings of this type are commonly consulted by the industry and media to confirm platform-specific releases.

Critical reception for Dragon Quest XI S has been strong.

Nintendo Life awarded the Nintendo Switch version a nine out of ten score, praising the game as a standout modern JRPG.

In its review, Nintendo Life described the title as a richly paced narrative with memorable characters, a content-dense overworld and an outstanding soundtrack, recommending the Definitive Edition to both newcomers and returning players.

Key factual takeaways:

- Dragon Quest XI S: Echoes of an Elusive Age - Definitive Edition was released on Nintendo Switch in 2019.

- Square Enix is the developer and publisher behind the Dragon Quest series.

- A Taiwan classification listing now records a Switch 2 version of Dragon Quest XI S.

Platform announcements for Nintendo hardware and major ports have historically appeared during Nintendo Direct presentations and on the Nintendo eShop, and classification board entries are often an early formal step in a regional release process.

This Taiwan rating entry is a confirmed administrative record; further release windows or official platform announcements would need confirmation from Square Enix or Nintendo via their customary channels.