While it wasn't necessarily intended, I think the big number of both first and third party ports on Switch have turned the console int something that in some ways is making up for the flaws if Nintendo's previous home systems.
N64 and the Gamecube suffered from the lack of third party releases and the last seven years have been filled with many 5th/6th gen releases finally getting put out on Nintendo consoles: Final Fantasy VII through XII, Marvel vs Capcom arcade games, the original Crash Bandicoot Trilogy, Devil May Cry 1-3, Tomb Raider, Knights of the Old Republic Metal Gear Solid 2 & 3, Kingdom Hearts, and so forth. It's all decades after their releases, but it's so many significant franchises getting their proper libraries on Nintendo when even consoles like the Wii and/the Wii U didn't get them.
Speaking of that, the Wii and Wii U ports have also helped give their respective games their proper due. With the former, various titles that felt chained by the often forced motion controls are getting versions that embrace alternatives, whether they be traditional controllers or even touch screen options. Skyward Sword, Mario Galaxy, Fatal Frame, Return to Dreamland, (the upcoming) DKC Returns, all games that now can better appreciated because one's preferred means is available. That's not even getting into third party ones like Monkey Ball, Okami, Force Unleashed, and Epic Mickey which are also allowing for Nintendo ports without the absolute requirement of motion/waggle.
With the Wii U ports, while it's easy to point to the touch screen use no longer being a factor, I think the most notable correction is simply giving great games the audience (and community) they deserved. A release like Tropical Freeze was so good and not only warranted the install base of the Switch but a move away from the toxic context it found its initial reveal in. Same with 3D World which now more properly judged on its own merits rather than critiqued for not being the sandbox game many wanted. Even something like Tokyo Mirage Sessions (while not to my taste and an odd execution of a franchise crossover) at least got a chance in fairer market to sink or swim than the one it found itself in circa 2015.
While the Switch is an incredibly successful console thanks to numerous factors, I genuinely think one of the reasons it has become so beloved is that it's library is compensatory of Nintendo's issues in the 5th through 8th generations.