Archive for the ‘PS3, PS4’ Category

2008 Game of the Year – Vote Now!

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

I have just published a poll that you can vote in to choose the best game of 2008, on all platforms. All the best selling games of the year are on the list, and also some games that, although did not top the monthly top 10, were still innovative enough to be considered. I hope I haven’t missed out on any obvious candidates, but I probably have, and if so, please post a comment to let me know.

Once the votes are in, the results will be published here and analysed.

You can vote in the poll by going to this page.

Weekly News Roundup (1 February 2009)

Sunday, February 1st, 2009

It’s been deadly hot here in Melbourne, Australia. Above 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) weather, compounded by the electricity grid melting down, causing the A/C to fail. The Windows “Hibernate” feature became a familiar friend as I turn on the computer to do some work and then had to quickly hibernate to prevent the CPU from blowing up.

Firmware HQ - All your optical drive firmware needs

Firmware HQ - All your optical drive firmware needs

But work is work, and I can finally reveal what I, and many others, have been working on in secret (well, not really) all this time.  Say hello to Firmware HQ, the new firmware download site for your CD, DVD, HD DVD, Blu-ray (and whatever comes next) drives. ImgBurn‘s LIGHTNING UK! came up with the idea and worked on many of the finishing touches, I worked on the php/mysql stuff and Digital Digest is hosting the site (as well as the official forum), ImgBurn beta testers and our forum members worked on getting the data entered in, and many others contributed in many other ways. It’s not a huge website by any means, but it has nearly a thousand firmware files for download, and more will be added as time goes by.

For Digital Digest, this will be the first of many projects over 2009 as we try to expand the website by taking some existing popular content and to expand on them. I can’t say much now, mainly because I don’t know what the hell I’m talking about yet. To be blunt, 2008 was a bit crap in many ways for many people, and while 2009 hasn’t started well with Shingles and whatnot, I’m more determined than ever to get more work done. That is unless another game like Fallout 3 is released, then I might have to take a month off (and yes, I did download Operation Anchorage).

A new version of the ATI Catalyst drivers were released, along with a new version of ATI Video Converter. At first, I thought it has improved support for ATI Stream, ATI’s GPU assisted video encoding engine, but it didn’t turn out that way, in fact, it might have been a bit worse. ATI needs to get their act together to battle Nvidia’s CUDA, and that means proper video encoding acceleration that uses close to 100% of the GPU, not the intermittent 15% that ATI Video Converter current uses. 

Okay, that’s it for … oh wait, I haven’t done the weekly news review yet.

CopyrightAnyway, let’s start with Copyright news. Monty Python video clips were one of the most pirated clips on YouTube, until the Monty Python people decided to take action. Instead of hiring teams of lawyers, they decided to open their own channel on YouTube and offer free high quality video clips of their most popular content. And guess what, sales of Monty Python DVDs are now up 23,000%, all thanks to pirates who pushed content owners into taking action, but not through litigation, but by giving people what they want. How’s that for fighting piracy?

Comcast: "Arresting" the wrong people for piracy "crimes"

Comcast: "Arresting" the wrong people for piracy "crimes"

But those stuck with the idea that litigation or policing action are the only way to prevent piracy are still at it. AT&T and Comcast are now copyright policeman for the RIAA, by spying on their customers, following their every click, and then making judgement on whether what they’re doing is illegal or not, without a judge or jury in sight. And to nobody’s surprise, cases of mistaken identity and perfectly innocent users have been persecuted by Comcast, due to Comcast’s own stupidity it seems. There is a reason why you need judges and juries, and not rely on policeman to make all judgements, especially policeman owned by a private corporation. And to pay for all this, or perhaps as an alternative to policing action, is to label everyone as a pirate and then make them pay for it up front by introducing a piracy tax. I’m actually not totally against the idea provided that the tax is a small amount, maybe $5 a month, and that this allows unlimited downloading of pirated stuff without penalty, as technically, it’s not really piracy if I’ve already “paid” for it. But I’m sure the RIAA/MPAA is looking at $50, rather than $5. 

The DRM approach once again shows the weakness of the system, when purchases become merely rentals that content owners can at anytime revoke your right to them, even if you’ve already paid them time and time again. This time, it’s PC DRM for the game Gears of War, which “expired” along with other games that use the same DRM because the DRM publishers forgot to issue updated certificates for the game. People with pirated versions enjoyed playing their games through this “black-out”, so there’s yet another incentive to “go pirate”.

If “go pirate” is a slogan that you like, then perhaps you might want to consider becoming a fully paid members of the US Piracy Party, which is launching itself in California. 

High DefinitionLet’s get to the high definition news. People who read the WNR knows that you cannot ever accuse me of being biased *towards* Blu-ray. But those who read my weekly Blu-ray sales figure analysis will have seen that I have been pretty kind towards the progress Blu-ray has made, and make no mistakes, it has made progress, especially in the last two month. The progress has largely been made by The Dark Knight (and Iron Man), followed by a series of key catalogue releases by studios previously favouring HD DVD. King Kong, is the latest example. As is Band of Brothers. Bourne Trilogy, sales figures available next week, will be a hit too. These titles have allowed Blu-ray to gain significant market share easily, because hardly anyone is still buying the DVD versions of these films, most already owning them, and this allows the mostly Blu-ray exclusive editions to dominate. For example, 89.62% of all King Kong movie sales were on Blu-ray in the week it was released. And we’ve already established that the people buying Blu-ray movies are early adopters or enthusiasts who don’t care that much about pricing, and so in a very week DVD sales environment, Blu-ray is thriving.

Max Payne, also recently released, is an interesting example. A movie that flopped, but got to the top of the sales charts, ahead of The Dark Knight, on Blu-ray. The connection of the movie being based on a video game, and  Blu-ray relying on a video game console, is not lost. Time to release Super Mario Brothers, Street Fighter and all those awful Uwe Boll movies on Blu-ray? 

Sensio 3D: Now the official 3D standard for the DVD Forum

Sensio 3D: Now the official 3D standard for the DVD Forum

If crap video game adaptation can’t help Blu-ray, then perhaps 3D can. And maybe it can help DVDs too. The DVD Forum has chosen a 3D standard which it will now consider official: Sensio 3D. That may sound like big news, but remember that HD DVD was the official DVD Forum approved HD format, and we all know how that ended. The official 3D standard for Blu-ray is still to be decided, hopefully it will be Sensio 3D as the last thing we need is another format war.

And while not strictly HD news, but the US is nearing a Digital TV only age, with analogue to be cut off. Not everyone is happy of course, but with these type of big changes, you can never please everyone. There was talk of a delay to get more people on-board the digital train, but it looks like to have been defeated in the senate. Come the cut off date, a lot of people are going to be wondering why their TV suddenly stops working. Here in Australia, we’ve already delayed the cut off date by 2 years. This is despite DTV boxes available for the price of a Blu-ray movie these days, and almost all new TV sets having one built in. 

And also not exactly HD, but since we’re getting near to the gaming section below, it’s better if I put it here. Xbox 360 and Netflix’s video streaming deals seems to have paid off, with up to 400,000 new subscribers being predicted for Q1 2009. If this pays off, then the chance of Blu-ray coming to the Xbox 360 has just went from slim to none.

GamingAnd onto gaming. Sony say no again to price cuts, but this time there’s no rubbish line about the PS3 being good value or even too cheap.

No, instead, it was a very honest assessment of the current situation by SCEE’s David Reeves in which it was admitted that while the PS3 is too expensive, Sony cannot afford price cuts because they’re in trouble financially, with losses of more than $2 billion predicted for 2008. Remember that Sony still loses money on each and every PS3 sold, so a cheaper PS3 means more losses pre console, which is compounded by the fact that a cheaper PS3 will sell more. But then again, without a significant hardware presence, Sony will find it hard to make money off the games, which is the real money earner for the industry. So short term pain could equal long term gain, but with jobs on the line, nobody is going to want to take such risks. So overpriced PS3s for the short and medium term it is then, at least according to Reeves.

Operation: Anchorage adds to the Fallout 3 Universe, but only for the PC/Xbox 360

Operation: Anchorage adds to the Fallout 3 Universe, but only for the PC/Xbox 360

New downloadable content for Fallout 3 was released during the week, dubbed “Operation: Anchorage”. Unfortunately for PS3 owners, it is available for the PC and Xbox 360 only. The next DLC will be “The Pitt”, and “Broken Steel” in March. PS3 owners will miss out on all of these DLCs, thanks to a Microsoft exclusive deal, but missing “Broken Steel” would be the biggest blow because this patch will allow after-ending play and upgraded level caps, thus turning Fallout 3 into a whole other beast when it comes to longevity. This is what happens when you don’t have the most number of consoles in the US (and don’t have control over the PC gaming industry like Microsoft has thanks to the DirectX and Games For Windows platforms) – developers will be more likely to sign exclusive deals with the platform that’s most likely able to sell the most copies of their games. Something for Sony to think about I think when they decide to cut prices or not.

As for “Operation: Anchorage”, I’ve nearly finished it having started it only yesterday. It gives the Lone Wanderer a bit more interaction with the Brotherhood Outcasts, and you get to see the world as it was before the nuclear holocaust, albeit one that’s freezing cold and in the middle of a war zone.  It’s not a huge add-on, probably not worth the 800 Microsoft points that it costs, but if you’re like me and a Fallout 3 freak (mutant?), then you’ll buy it without a second thought.

I think that’s all I have for next week. Don’t forget to visit Firmware HQ!

Weekly News Roundup (25 January 2009)

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

Today is Chinese New Year’s Eve, also the eve of Australia’s national day – celebrations here in Australia are going to be doubly big tomorrow, lots of flag waving and dragon dancing. I’m almost over my Shingles outbreak, not really feeling much discomfort anymore, although I’ve been quite busy lately with a new project that will soon be made public. It’s not a Digital Digest thing, but it’s related, and that’s all I shall say for now. But that’s not the only reason I was busy, because I had the December 2008 NPD figures to analyse plus write a yearly NPD roundup, both of which are now up. I love graphs.

CopyrightLet’s start with the copyright section, the last one of the Year of the Rat, which has been a pretty bad year (for us Monkeys, anyway). Unless you’ve been living (or is that hiding) under a rock for the last week, you should have seen the amazing pictures of the Obama inauguration. Change starts this week, but on the copyright front at least, things seems to be moving in a bad direction.

Obama is now the President, but will he stay true to his pro-consumer stance

Obama is now the President, but will he stay true to his pro-consumer stance

Another Obama pick for a top level position has been revealed as yet another anti-piracy advocate, previously working for the BSA. I must say that Obama, who said all the right things during the election campaign in regards to consumer rights, and had the backings of all the pro consumer rights groups, is really taking this whole “team of rivals” thing a bit too far with these picks. We all knew that Joe Biden was a friend of the RIAA, but all this pro big media stuff just doesn’t really fit in well with the rest of Obama’s agendas. Let’s once again hope that these moves are just there to balance out the administration’s views, and that in the end, it will be Obama’s pro-consumer views that will be the policies of the administration, not those of these anti-piracy advocates.

In the “taking copyright control too far” segment for this week, the website in the spotlight it YouTube. They are now apparently blocking material and then asking questions later, blocking legal material and forcing the rightful content owners to lodge a dispute before their content will be uploaded. That’s the problem with algorithm based copyright detection, it’s not very accurate, but to have a human pair of eyes look at everything would be cost prohibitive, unless the RIAA/MPAA want to foot the bill. YouTube is now offering downloads on selected videos, so you can imagine why they might be a bit more paranoid in regards to copyright.

The Dutch have commissioned a report which says that P2P actually benefits the economy. You know what, this doesn’t surprise me one bit. People used to the convenience of P2P will naturally consider other forms of legal Internet distribution. A track you downloaded off P2P illegally just might lead you to buy the album legally. Same with games, movies and all sorts of other things you can buy and download online. It’s like the modern day shareware floppy, try before you buy. Plus there are the other benefits to bandwidth saving and reduction is hosting costs, which will benefit businesses that host a lot of downloads.

High DefinitionIn High Definition news, I want to clear up something first. I get asked why this section is called “High Definition News” and not just “Blu-ray News”. Well, that’s mainly because while Blu-ray is obviously the main focal point of HD at the moment, HD covers much more than just Blu-ray. Topics such as H.264, HDTV, HD downloads, GPU acceleration and even 3D TV are all covered here, so calling it simply “Blu-ray” news would be a bit misleading. Besides, I’ve got the Blu-ray logo to represent this section, and the writing is in blue, so that should appease the fanboys somewhat I hope.

To prove the above, the first story I’m going to post is one about how 3D HDTV is going to fail. I’ve said something similar before, because as long as uncomfortable glasses are required, nobody is going to take it all that seriously. And when glasses aren’t required anymore (holographic vision? HDHV?), will Blu-ray or even TV still exist? Holorooms, perhaps?

Porn is driving the HD industry, Blu-ray and HD downloads included

Porn is driving the HD industry, Blu-ray and HD downloads included

Pornos. Now that has gotten your attention, it looks like you’re not the only one who is interested, because once again, porn is driving the new HD industry. However, the article mentions not only Blu-ray, but also HD downloads, which are possibly a better idea for porn as it’s easier to hide. It’s again interesting to see industry mention HD, but talking not only about Blu-ray, but about the emerging download market.

And they just might need downloads to exceed, because home video is suffering in the face of threats it now faces from the video gaming industry. Blu-ray may help get back some of the money that DVD sales have lost, but even Blu-ray is only alive because of a game console, and the more money people spend on Wii, 360 and PS3 hardware and software, that’s less money they have to spend on movies. It is now a highly efficient process to extract money from consumers, and so there’s little room to get people to spend more money, which is what Blu-ray was all about. Not more money, but money better spend, is what people want, and you can’t really beat the interactive goodness and the longevity the average game provides, rather than the (rather short) 2 hour movie, even if it is in glorious HD (and games are now too, don’t forget). 

GamingThis brings us nicely into gaming. Let’s start with something a little more tasteful, and that’s the news of another PS3 firmware update. Version 2.6 adds a photo gallery, plus DivX 3.11 support. As usual, wait until other willing guinea pigs have sacrificed their PS3s before attempting to update, and also be careful of the well known, but unacknowledged (at least officially), firmware update bug that’s borked more PS3s than any other problem, mine included.

Then we come to the less tasteful stuff, all from Sony (or at least SCE Chairman Kazuo Hirai) as they try to defend their pretty terrible set of figures from the latest NPD figures (all PlayStation hardware actually sold less in November and then in December, then the same months last year – the only game consoles to suffer this fate even in these harsher economic situations).  First up, he bashes the Xbox 360 and Wii by saying that the 360 will soon be forgotten, no doubt in the long shadow the PS3 will cast over the entire gaming industry (my words, not his), and that the Wii isn’t even considered a competitor to the mighty PS3. No, that doesn’t sound arrogant at all, why do you ask?

The "soon to be forgotten" Xbox 360 outsells the PS3 in 2nd half of 2008

The "soon to be forgotten" Xbox 360 outsells the PS3 in 2nd half of 2008

I mean the Wii has only outsold the PS3 by 7 million consoles in 2008 (in the US), which is actually more than the total number of PS3 sold (that’s right, the number of Wii’s sold minus the number of PS3’s sold in the US in 2008 is larger than the total number of PS3’s in existence over there). And the soon to be forgotten Xbox 360, which even outsold the PSP, let alone the PS3, only has double the number of consoles in people’s homes than the PS3, and only had 31% of the top 10 games sold last year, compared to the PS3’s mighty 5.77%.

And that’s not all folks. Hirai continues by saying that the PS3 has been made intentionally hard for programmers because they want developers to take longer to do what the PS3 is capable of doing, to extend the life of the PS3. Gobsmackingly hilarious, but it does explain why most multi-platform games are the same or better on the 360, despite the 360’s inferior hardware. So Sony are admitting they made things harder for everyone so developers can produce sub-standard games at first and only produce games that’s worthy of the PS3 later on, all to make the PS3 last longer? How about making games that are great and better than the competition from launch (I know, controversial), so you can establish yourself as the dominant console for years to come. And better graphics and less buggy controls is not what people want anymore – it’s the innovative concept of the games that people want, and you don’t need 8 cell processors to allow this to happen (cf. Wii).  Of course, their strategy worked perfectly for the PS2, but you only have to look at what other consoles the PS2 was in competition at that time, and what the PS3’s competitors are this time round, to see why it might not work for the PS3. Plus the pricing differences between these consoles. 

Say the PS3 is a superior piece of hardware. Say that the PS3 was the last console to be released compared to the Wii and 360. Say that the PS3 is better value because it is also a high quality Blu-ray player. But don’t try to justify your mistakes, and the PS3’s many flaws, by making stuff up like this. And I still hold up hope that all of this is just lost in translations stuff, and not really what it appears to be right now.   

Sorry for the rant, but I’m not alone in thinking Sony aren’t doing all they can to make the PS3 the best console on the market, and it’s hard to hear them say that this was all intentional and part of their plan.

Anyway, that’s all I have for this week. Hope the year of the Ox is as good for you as it appears to be for us Monkeys, and that ox (bull) is a good omen for the stock markets. See you next year/week.

Game Consoles – NPD Sales Figures – 2008 Year in Review

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

Now that the December 2008 NPD figures have been made available, and I have posted the analysis, I have now covered a complete year in terms of NPD figures and so it’s fitting to now take a look at 2008 through the NPD figures, but mainly concentrating on the Xbox 360, PS3 and Wii.

The total hardware sales figures for 2008 are as follows:

  • Wii: 10,171,000
  • DS: 9,951,000
  • Xbox 360: 4,735,000
  • PSP: 3,829,500
  • PS3: 3,544,100
  • PS2: 2,502,700

This is a breakdown of these numbers, for the Xbox 360, PS3 and Wii:

NPD 2008: Console hardware sales breakdown

NPD 2008: Console hardware sales breakdown

As you can see, the Wii totally dominated, with the Xbox 360 having a slight lead over the PS3 thanks to the PS3’s stronger numbers at the beginning of the year and the Xbox 360’s stronger numbers towards to the end. To further illustrate this point, let’s have a look at the graphs for the Xbox 360/PS3, broken down for the first half of the year and then the second:

NPD 2008: Hardware Sales, 1st half of year

NPD 2008: Hardware Sales, 1st half of year

NPD 2008: Hardware Sales, 2nd half of year

NPD 2008: Hardware Sales, 2nd half of year

Quite a turnaround for the Xbox 360 and the PS3. PS3’s slight lead in the first half of 2008 turned into a big deficit in the second. 

Now let’s look at game sales. Looking only at the monthly number one titles, here there are:

NPD 2008: Monthly Number One's

NPD 2008: Monthly Number One's

NPD 2008: Monthly Number One's

NPD 2008: Monthly Number One's

The ‘sea of green’ will make Microsoft very happy indeed, although the Wii did very respectably with only two entries out of 12. Sony will be disappointed that Little Big Planet and Resistance did not take the number one spot. And with their only number one title occurring in the first half of the year, it further underlines the loss of momentum in the second half.

But only looking at the number one titles don’t really tell us all that much. By extending it to the top 10, we then have the following breakdown in terms of the number of titles sold for each format:

  • Wii: 22,077,100 (46.61%)
  • Xbox 360: 18,924,600 (39.95%)
  • PS3: 6,367,200 (13.44%)
NPD 2008: Monthly Top 10 Games

NPD 2008: Monthly Top 10

Nintendo’s domination is now showing up, because Wii Play, Wii Fit and Mario Kart always makes the top 10. The Xbox 360 is still holding on admirably, and the PS3 is doing better because it is now managing to get one or two titles in the top 10 (but as mentioned before, only once at the number one spot). 

But even just looking at the top 10 doesn’t give us a whole picture of the actual top 10 for the year (just the ones that made it to the top 10 for each month, so a game that’s number 11 for all 12 months might actually turn out to be the number one selling game of the year). Luckily, NPD provided the 2008 yearly top 10, and here they are:

NPD 2008: Yearly Top 10

NPD 2008: Yearly Top 10

NPD 2008: Yearly Top 10

NPD 2008: Yearly Top 10

The Wii domination is now fully showing, with the top 4 titles all Wii ones, but unfortunately for third party publishers, they’re all Nintendo titles. The second half of the table is dominated by the Xbox 360, but this time it’s better news for publishers as there’s only one Microsoft title (and that was actually Epic Games’). The poor showing for the PS3 continues, with only a single title in the top 10, Rockstar’s Grand Theft Auto IV (previously a PlayStation timed exclusive), a multi-platform release that was outsold by the Xbox 360 version by nearly a 1.7 to 1 margin.

So that’s 2008 in charts and graphs. Nintendo for the Gold, Xbox 360 for the Silver and the PS3 for the Bronze.

Game Consoles – December 2008 NPD Sales Figure Analysis

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

The December 2008 NPD figures are in, and this month represents the peak in terms of sales before a huge drop off that will occur in January. It’s still the same picture as December, with everything up by compared to November. You can read last month’s analysis here. The figures are from NPD, a marketing research firm that releases games console sale data every month.

The figures for US sales in December are below, ranked in order of number of sales (December 2007 figures also shown, including percentage change):

  • DS: 3,040,000 (Total: 28 million; December 2007: 2,470,000 – up 23%)
  • Wii: 2,150,000 (Total: 17.5 million; December 2007: 1,350,000 – up 59%)
  • Xbox 360: 1,440,000 (Total: 13.9 million; December 2007: 1,260,000 – up 14%)
  • PSP: 1,020,000 (Total: 14.4 million; December 2007: 1,060,000 – down 4%)
  • PS3: 726,000 (Total: 6.8 million; December 2007: 797,000 – down 9%)
  • PS2: 410,000 (Total: 43.6 million; December 2007: 1,120,000 – down 63%)
  • NPD December 2008 Game Console US Sales Figures

    NPD December 2008 Game Console US Sales Figures

    NPD Game Console Total US Sales Figures (as of December 2008)

    NPD Game Console Total US Sales Figures (as of December 2008)

    My prediction last month was:

    Steady as she goes, is my prediction for next month. I can’t see PlayStation Home, a beta at that, helping to sell too many PS3s, and with no price drops in view, I can’t see the current situation change much.

    And that’s largely the case. The only “surprise” is that the DS managed to outsell the Wii, which isn’t all that surprising because that’s what happened at the same time last year as well. Once again, we see the PlayStation console numbers in red because sales dropped compared to the same time last year – that’s now happened in both November and December so it’s definitely a trend, rather than an outlier. The good news for Sony is that the percentage difference between last year and now aren’t as bad as last month, with both the PSP and PS3’s percentage drops in single digits. The PS2 continues its slide into oblivion though, selling at only 37% of last year’s numbers (which admittedly, were still quite strong).

    More than 5 million units of Wii and DS were sold in December, which is simply amazing. Last year’s numbers were amazing enough too, at nearly 4 million combined, but the 3rd Christmas after the Wii’s release, it is selling even stronger. The greater sales numbers could be a sign that Wii manufacturing has finally caught up to demand, because availability over the previous two holiday periods was a major issue.

    The Xbox 360 did well, and managed to outsell last year’s respectable numbers. It just missed out on outselling the PS3 by a 2 to 1 margin, by 12,000 units, but if you had told Microsoft earlier in the year that they would be selling neck and neck with the PS3, let alone nearly doubling it in sales, they would have taken it. Not quite pulling a rabbit out of the hat, because price drops are easy but you can only do it so many times, but the change of direction early on in the year to try and emulate the Wii’s success seems to have paid off.  

    The less said about the PlayStation brand the better for this month. Sony will hope that future price cuts and their 10 year plan will start to bear fruit this year, and I think it will (the price cuts especially). 

    Otherwise there’s nothing else to be said that I didn’t already say last month, so let’s get to the software figures. Wii Play has been selling amazingly ever since it debuted, and this month is no exception, except it’s now the number 1 selling software of the month. To be fair, Wii Play is at an advantage compared to all other titles, because it really is a must-have for the Wii, and not even because of the actual software either. The Wii is a multi player console, and so almost everyone need to buy another Wii Remote and Wii Play is the perfect way to do it. Other than this, Call of Duty: World at War continues to sell strong, just like this time last year when CoD4 was the top selling title. And pretty much all of last month’s top 10’s returned, except for Resistance 2 and Wii Music. Both titles are replaced by the “oldie” Mario Kart DS, which is a bit of a surprise. The new Wii Animal Crossing title also did well. The Wii won comfortably this month by taking 55.9% of all sales in the top 10, compared to the Xbox 360’s 31.6%, and only 6.2% for the PS3. Here’s the complete list of the top 10 software sales:

    1. Wii Play w/ Remote (Wii, Nintendo) – 1,460,000
    2. Call of Duty: World at War (Xbox 360, Activision Blizzard) – 1,330,000
    3. Wii Fit w/Board (Wii, Nintendo) – 999,000   
    4. Mario Kart w/ Wheel (Wii, Nintendo) – 979,000
    5. Guitar Hero: World Tour (Wii, Activision Blizzard) – 850,000
    6. Gears of War 2 (Xbox 360, Microsoft) – 745,000
    7. Left 4 Dead (Xbox 360, Electronic Arts) – 629,000
    8. Mario Kart (DS, Nintendo) – 540,000
    9. Call of Duty: World at War (PS3, Activision Blizzrd) – 533,000
    10. Animal Crossing: City Folk (Wii, Nintendo) – 497,000

    Next month will see a huge drop in terms of sales, which is part of the usual cycle. Stock availability could affect sales, and usually the better selling consoles will do worse in January compared to the lower selling ones that still have plenty of stock left. So if Wii, DS and Xbox 360 sales struggle, while PS3 sales improve in comparison despite no popular new games or price cuts, then this is one possible explanation. 

    Another blog post will be up soon which looks at the 2008  in review.

    See you next month.