Again, the only reason people are ragging on Capcom is because they're upset that Monster Hunter World isn't coming to Switch and MHXX isn't being localised yet. In the grand scheme of things, it says absolutely nothing about Capcom's intended long term support for a platform that is barely 4 months old yet.
It's really not that. I've mentioned Capcom's support on Switch as weak before we even knew about MHXX, and it would be seen as even weaker if MHXX didn't exist. The absence of smaller titles like Disney Afternoon Collection speak as loud about what Capcom execs thought of Switch than Monster Hunter, in my eyes.
The same goes for Level-5, who were there on day 1 for 3DS with Layton 5, and with games like Time Travelers, an Inazuma Eleven enhanced port and Layton Vs Phoenix Wright in the works. Nothing on Switch.
It's all relative, really. There's Capcom's support versus other publishers like Square Enix, and Switch Capcom support versus other platforms like 3DS.
Either way, one thing is true: Capcom execs weren't convinced Switch would be worth their time in the launch window, so they missed the boat on smaller, low-resource games at the very least. Bigger projects make more sense since they have larger turnaround times, and they are often greenlit before publishers received Switch dev kits or were convinced the Switch would be a success at all.
We saw this when PS4 and One launched - support was rather tepid outside of Ubisoft, Activision and EA, and a lot of publishers were holding on to last gen with cross-gen games, or thinking that PC and mobile were the future (see a Jimquisition episode on Square Enix -
"Why Square Enix is carving its games into bits"). Only when they realised their market predictions were wrong did they start supporting these platforms properly, but due to the turnaround times of game development the publishers saw a quick fix: outsourcing remasters.
That Capcom didn't even want to devote resource in the latter speaks volumes. I wouldn't even say the small-scale games like Disney Afternoon Collection would be as much work as a remaster, and Capcom has a high profile MT Framework 3DS game out soon (Dai Gyakutan Saiban 2) that they could make cross-gen for Switch like how Ace Attorney 5 landed on iOS.