Nintendo Switch
The Nintendo Switch displayed in Japan. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

The Nintendo Switch will have three additional games when it launches on March 3. Game developer Tomorrow Corporation has announced that “World of Goo,” “Little Inferno” and “Human Resource Machine” will be available at the launch of the hybrid console.

The three games from Tomorrow Corporation aren’t new. All three of them have already been released for previous Nintendo hardware, as pointed out by Polygon. “World of Goo” was first released in 2008 for the Wii, while “Little Inferno” and “Human Resource Machine” were released for the Wii U in 2012 and 2015, respectively. However, gamers on the Nintendo Switch will be given some exclusive content when they purchase the new version of the games.

“All three games will come bundles with their full original soundtracks. Tomorrow Corporation’s intrepid interns have created a new Soundtrack Mode, where players can explore Kyle Gabler’s wonderfully bizarre music in this special mode, available only on Nintendo Switch,” the developer said on its website.

“World of Goo” is a physics-based game where players will have to build towers and bridges out of balls of goo. “Human Resource Machine” is a programming-based puzzle game where players will take the role of a corporate office worker tasked to create programs to form rudimentary commands.

Lastly, “Little Inferno” is a sandbox game where players will be encourage to simply burn objects in a fireplace. Unlike most games, “Little Inferno” doesn’t really have much objectives, nor does it have states of failure.

As of this writing, Tomorrow Corporation’s three games will be available alongside “The Legend of Zelda: Breath of he Wild,” “1-2-Switch,” “Skylanders Imaginators,” “Super Bomberman R” and “Just Dance 2017” on March 3 for the Nintendo Switch.

Square Enix’s JRPG “I Am Setsuna” was also confirmed as a launch title yesterday. The Switch version of the game will come with an exclusive free DLC The Temporal Battle Arena, a new mode that allows players to battle other online parties, according to Gematsu.