We can criticize Nintendo all we want for refusing to cave to everyone's collective desire for an open-world Pokémon game that's more like The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim but the world's oldest video game company has a reason to ignore outside noise - whatever it's doing right now and what it's been doing for years works.

, a Tokyo-based book and magazine publisher that specializes in economics and business, calculates that Nintendo is now Japan's wealthiest company, boasting a staggering $11 billion in cash reserves and virtually zero debt. This financial stability, a remarkable feat in today's economy and particularly turbulent gaming industry stems from the massive success of the Nintendo Switch and its games, coupled with the earnings from the

Super Mario Bros. Movie

.

Standing in stark contrast to market contemporaries, this highlights the effectiveness of Nintendo's strategic business operations and prudent financial decision-making, which have allowed it to accumulate significant liquidity without resorting to the more common industry practice of debt financing.