NPDs Look Back on December, 2007 47
Joystiq has the NPD numbers for the entire year of 2007 and (of course) December. Last year was a banner year for games, with the industry as a whole coming close to cracking $18 billion in sales. The big winner was the Wii, of course, with some 6 million units sold over the course of the year. The 360 sold about four and a half million, and the PS3 sold about two and a half. The big software seller was (un-shockingly) Halo 3, at 4.82 million sold, with Wii Play close behind at 4.12m. Here are the software numbers for December: "Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare (Xbox 360) -- 1.47m, Super Mario Galaxy (Wii) -- 1.40m, Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock (PS2) -- 1.25m, Wii Play w/ Remote (Wii) -- 1.08m, Assassin's Creed (Xbox 360) -- 894K, Halo 3 (Xbox 360) -- 743K, Brain Age 2 (DS) -- 660K, Madden NFL 08 (PS2) -- 655K, Guitar Hero III: Legends of Rock (Xbox 360) -- 625K, Mario and Sonic at the Olympic Games (Wii) -- 613K"
This is silly, but... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Either way, I think Wii Play is worth $10 bucks. The pool game is pretty fun, and Tanks! is pretty fun with that interface. The other games are pretty entertaining as well.
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"Hey, we have this really bad game. We can't justify making box art for, much less putting it on a shelf... our test group estimated its value at just over a dead raccoon's testicle."
"Make a bigger box, toss a wiimote in and charge five bucks more."
"Profit!"
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Re:This is silly, but... (Score:5, Interesting)
These results include all games, including those that are sold in cheese-ball bundle fashion or low-cost, because the true intended audience for these -- market researchers for game companies -- need to see raw data without applying any rules to them. If Wii Play is selling well because it bundles a Wiimote, then that's a hint to these people that if they can bundle a desirable and hard-to-find accessory with a cheaply-made game, then they can potentially sell a lot more of both than if they don't. I think you'll find in the future 3rd-party controllers shipping with cheap games in order to try and draw more sales as a result of this, sort of in the same way "Deer Hunter" sales at Wal-Mart created a ton of imitators.
Look at this from NPD's perspective -- why they compile this information. If your rule here were applied to all products: Should we not consider Rock Band because it comes with controllers? Should we not consider Forza sales since it was bundled with some 360's? Should we not consider the first-year PS2/PS3 game console sales because many people purchased them at the time as DVD/Blu-Ray players? Should we not consider Peggle because it is inexpensive? This kind of arbitrary distinction here as to what is a "proper" game or a "proper" way to sell it is very difficult for NPD to make; it works against the value that their figures are meant to provide.
While NPD is responsible for providing accurate information to their customers, they are not responsible for the decisions made by their customers. If I'm a market researcher for a game company, how I interpret Wii Play's sales is putting my job on the line and my company's future on the line. It is up to me to use my own brain to figure out what you have.
But I must know what the real data is, which is why NPD includes Wii Play as a top seller.
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Wii Sports isn't bundled with the console in Japan.
Guitar Hero? (Score:1)
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Wii Play is a series of mini-mini games. The entire product can be experienced in roughly 45 minutes. Without the Wiimote, it would likely sell for $10 (considering the $10 increase in price over a Wiimote)
Between people I know and what I have seen the three times I waited in line to buy a Wii (one for myself, the other two for famil
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Plus if you rate it for what it is - 10 games at $1 each it's pretty good value. I wonder what the charts would look like if other budget games such as those from the Wii Market Place were included.
To be a loyal SOny fanboy (Score:2, Funny)
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Meanwhile I haven't had a stable connection on Xbox Live since the week before xmas, my console sounds like it's ready to die again and I have an almost identical slate of games to the PS3 coming up. I've been playing my 360 pretty much non-stop since July of 2007 but it isn't all roses and the upcoming line up
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If I was going to post as much du
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Feel free to ignore both. However, the sales indicate that the majority of people could care less about hi-def gaming, as those two are not being ignored in very large quantities.
BTW, I thought the PS2 DVD capabilities were fine, just kind of clunky to control.
The point you miss is that it doesn't have to "win" to be a good product and appreciated by it's owners and
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Saying that a PS3 is a version 1.5 of a PS2 is just plain immature and un
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The problem, as I mentioned, is timing. Let's say MS settled for a 4-year iteration on the XBox. That would mean that by November they'd be announcing the new Xbox (say XBox 3), to be released by December 2009. It would inc
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The PS3 taking #1 is very unlikely. Its sales are the worst of all three consoles and just having a sy
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The PS3 is being helped along by the fact that it's a cheap Blu ray player.
If in the next couple of months, blu-ray comes up on top, MS could just release an XBox Blu, with a hard drive and blu ray drive, but the exact same internals, guaranteeing compatibility. MS already produces a bunch of different editions of the XBox anyway. Release a blu-ray addon for older customers to use instead of the HDDVD one
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Now, if you want to see rationalization, I have a friend who's struggling to find a reason why he should buy more games for his 360 after it just got back from its second RROD return. Of course, he owns a PS3 too, so the only thing he's buying on the 360 from now on are exclusives.
The problem with PS3 numbers (Score:1, Informative)
The PS3 is hurting badly right now. Literally the only people I know who own one bought it for Blu-Ray support. There's no knowing how small the market is for PS3 games, but a good portion of PS3 sales will never translate into game sales.
You can tell this by looking at the Amazon.com video game bestsellers list. Yes, the PS3 is on the list, but it's beat by its own Blu-Ray remote and you have to drop t
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I also own a PS3. I have had it for nearly a year, but I still don't own a single Blu-Ray movie that I have bought. I got it primarily because I was interested in Resistance and I
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play video games with my fiance 25-30 hours a week
Slightly OT, but I think that this is a defining mark of our generation. The adults who got our first NES new for christmas, give or take.
My common-law girlfriend and I don't subscribe to television. We watch a movie maybe once a week, or on occasion episode of The Office. But we almost daily play video games together. I play my share of single player Wii games, but for the most part we sit down after work, with dinner, with friends, or otherwise and play games. I don't find us very exceptional, but ten
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Half of our gameplay time is spent playing different games, however...Generally, if I am playing a PC game, she will play Viva Pinata, mess around with the 26
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I agree with the comment about ten or so years ago; when people ask how my wife and I met and I explain, I still get a lot of odd stares and comments.
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Maybe I'm missing some sarcasm.
Anyway. You're right, society has changed. It's ok to play for 25 hours a week. the past generation spends twice that watching TV, and their parents (or grandparents enjoyed the radio a lot more than I do. We had audio learned, then visual learners, and now we're having people who learn through interaction (and learn more).
I think this is very po
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And the PS3 is actually more profitable to Sony as a blu-ray payer than it is a sa game player, plus Sony plans to sell shows and online movies. The failure of HD-DVD has game developers realizing that the PS3 will probably doing fine.
The real problem is the XBOX fanboys. The first XBOX was so
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Americans are still a lucky bunch, but the economy in the states is declining and will decline a lot more for the next few years before having a huge post-war boom. It's happened several times before. They will adapt to paying for a very expensive war (and I'm not trying to argue for or against the war), and then the war will end and they will leap up like they did in 1992.
While America is still a very important market, it's much more important to
NPD? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re:NPD? (Score:4, Informative)
The group tracks product sales and sells this information. Its pretty much recognized as the most respectible source of this type of information, but it isn't completely accurate. Walmart, for example, refuses to take part in NPD data collection.
Hope that helps.
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3 Wii (Score:1)
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Still, a great indicator of what's selling is to look at major areas that sell games. Go to Best Buy and see how much store space is devoted to Nintendo or Microsoft or Sony. You'll get the idea that each is doing very well, but Sony is fractured among a diverse group of systems (this is a good thing or a bad thing depending on your expectation of the economy).
NPD is not a target for attack. They are only inaccurate insof