Five hours. Gone. That's what one player reported losing to a bug in Pokemon XD: Gale of Darkness on the Nintendo Switch 2, after the game force-quit without warning and wiped everything since their last save. Another player came within a hair of losing 10 hours. The good news: a fix has now rolled out.
What the bug was actually doing
Pokemon XD: Gale of Darkness is available through the Nintendo GameCube Nintendo Classics app on Switch 2, and the bug in question was triggering a forced game closure mid-session. No warning, no graceful exit. The game just shut down, and anything you hadn't manually saved was gone with it.
For a game like Gale of Darkness, where you're deep in Shadow Pokemon encounters, multi-stage battles, and story sequences that don't always offer a convenient save point, that's a genuinely painful loss. The kind that makes you stare at the screen for a few seconds before deciding whether to keep going.
danger
The fix has been confirmed as live via the Nintendo GameCube Nintendo Classics app on Switch 2. You'll want to make sure your app is updated before jumping back in.
How much progress players actually lost
The community reaction tells the story pretty clearly. According to Serebii, the long-running Pokemon fansite that first flagged the update, the bug was affecting a notable number of players before the patch dropped.
One player on social media put it bluntly: "This happened to ME! 5 hours GONE." Another said they only lost around 30 minutes because they had been saving through the GameCube menu rather than relying on in-game saves alone. Without that habit, they estimated the loss would have been closer to 10 hours. A third player reported the same thing happening to their sibling, also well into double-digit playtime.
That's a wide range of damage, and it all comes down to how often individual players were manually saving.
The fix and what it covers
The patch was confirmed by Serebii via their official social channels, noting that Nintendo pushed an update specifically addressing this force-quit issue for Gale of Darkness within the GameCube Classics app. The fix appears to resolve the crash entirely, though Nintendo has not issued a detailed breakdown of what triggered the forced closure in the first place.
Here's the thing: this kind of bug is particularly rough for a classic GameCube title making its modern debut. Gale of Darkness originally launched in 2005, and for many players on Switch 2, this is their first time experiencing it. Losing hours of progress on a first playthrough stings differently than replaying a game you already know.
Why saving manually still matters
Even with the patch live, the episode is a reminder of how the GameCube Classics app handles saves. The app does support its own save state functionality through the system menu, separate from in-game saves, and the players who used it came out of this situation far better than those who relied solely on Gale of Darkness's native save points.
What most players miss is that the two save systems operate independently. In-game saves in Gale of Darkness only trigger at specific moments, but the GameCube menu's quick save can be used at any point during a session. Using both gives you a safety net that the in-game system alone doesn't provide.
The bigger picture for Switch 2 classic ports
This isn't the first time a Switch re-release of a classic Pokemon game has run into a progress-related bug. Pokemon FireRed and LeafGreen's Switch versions previously had a glitch that could cause certain legendary Pokemon to disappear permanently, which was also patched out after community reports surfaced.
For players returning to Gale of Darkness now that the fix is live, the experience should be smooth. The game remains one of the more distinct entries in the Pokemon series, built around Shadow Pokemon purification mechanics that never quite made it into a mainline title. Worth playing, and now worth playing without the fear of losing your session to a crash.
For more on what's available on Switch 2 right now, check out our gaming news and keep an eye on further updates to the GameCube Classics library. If you want to dig into more Pokemon content across platforms, our latest reviews have you covered.







