Rayman 30th Anniversary Edition appears for Switch

Rayman 30th Anniversary surfaces for Switch
RAYMAN 30TH
  • Key Takeaways:
  • A new classification listing for "Rayman 30th Anniversary Edition" has appeared in the Australian Classification database.
  • The listing names Nintendo Switch as a platform and credits Atari as developer/publisher, though no official announcement has been made.
  • Rayman’s original game debuted in 1995; this listing suggests an anniversary reissue or remaster is possible.
  • Expect further confirmation from Ubisoft, Atari, or official storefront listings before assuming release details.

What surfaced

A listing for "Rayman 30th Anniversary Edition" has been logged in the Australian Classification database and identifies Nintendo Switch as a platform. The entry is publicly visible to classification watchers and was picked up by database trackers.

The listing itself provides the basic title and platform but does not include a release date, price, or screenshots. As of now there has been no corresponding announcement on social channels or official storefront pages.

Who’s listed

Curiously, the classification credits Atari as the developer and publisher on the entry. That attribution is notable because the Rayman franchise is widely known to be owned and developed by Ubisoft.

There are a few ways to read that discrepancy: the listing could be an error, a third-party agreement for distribution or porting, or a sign of an unusual licensing arrangement. None of those possibilities are confirmed by the database alone.

Why it matters

A 30th anniversary edition implies either a straight port of the original 1995 Rayman, a polished remaster, or a collection of classic Rayman titles for modern platforms. For Switch owners, a remaster would be an easy way to revisit a landmark platformer on a handheld-capable system.

If Atari is truly involved, it could mean a third-party port or a re-release deal rather than a first-party Ubisoft launch. That would have implications for features, updates, and long-term support.

What to watch next

Look for an official announcement from Ubisoft or Atari, updates to the Australian Classification entry, or listings on the Nintendo eShop. Classification entries sometimes appear well before marketing begins, but they can also be mistaken or quietly removed.

We’ll watch for ESRB, PEGI, or other regional classifications to appear, and for any confirmation on platforms beyond Switch. Until a publisher or Ubisoft confirms details, treat the listing as an early leak rather than a final release plan.

For now, fans should keep an eye on official channels and storefronts for a formal reveal or more concrete information about what "Rayman 30th Anniversary Edition" will include.

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