Nintendo Teases Ocarina Of Time Rumor Ahead of June 9 Direct

Nintendo Teases Ocarina Of Time Rumor Ahead of June 9 Direct

Nintendo will stream a Nintendo Direct on June 9, 2026 at 7 a.m. PT, and the primary fan question is whether ocarina of time gets screen time. The event runs roughly 50 minutes, with a 95-minute Nintendo Treehouse: Live session afterward.

June 9 at 7 a.m. PT

Nintendo of America posted, “Join us on June 9 at 7am PT for a #NintendoDirect followed by Nintendo Treehouse: Live!” and added, “The Nintendo Direct will be roughly 50 minutes and Nintendo Treehouse: Live will be 95 minutes.” The stream will run on Nintendo’s YouTube page and Twitch, putting the company’s summer software pipeline in front of a fixed audience window before the day is over.

That format gives Nintendo a long runway for Switch and Switch 2 announcements, and it is why attention has settled on the June event rather than on a separate leak cycle. The company has used Directs to reveal major games, and the 50-minute length leaves room for a broader slate than a quick teaser reel.

Nate The Hate’s Prediction

Nate The Hate, the YouTuber and leaker, predicted that the Ocarina of Time remake will get screentime at the June Nintendo Direct. He is not the source of the event itself, but his call has sharpened the rumor around a project that has long been discussed without anything concrete attached to it.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time was released in 1998, which gives the remake chatter a built-in nostalgia hook, but nostalgia alone does not move a presentation schedule. Nintendo is still the only company that can turn the rumor into a real announcement, and the 95-minute Treehouse follow-up suggests there will be enough post-show coverage for any reveal to be unpacked immediately.

Ocarina Of Time in June

The pressure point is simple: a long-rumored remake gets value only if Nintendo chooses to place it in the Direct itself, not in the Treehouse after-show. If the company keeps the June 9 lineup focused elsewhere, the rumor stays a rumor; if it uses the 50-minute window for Zelda, the day becomes the first hard proof that the project has reached public reveal territory.

For readers, the practical move is straightforward: watch the Direct at 10 a.m. ET and treat the Treehouse as the follow-through, not the headline. That is where Nintendo will either give the remake its first real stage or leave the June chatter hanging for another season.

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