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Japanese Sales Charts, Week Ending March 6th

The Japanese market has slowed down this week, with sales halved from seven days ago, to 71 percent of the weekly average, due largely to the lack of big name releases – ...

David Jenkins, Blogger

March 11, 2005

2 Min Read
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The Japanese market has slowed down this week, with sales halved from seven days ago, to 71 percent of the weekly average, due largely to the lack of big name releases – especially compared to the deluge of last week. Figures were down on both 2004 and 2003, at approximately 100,000 below those for an average year. As it was Shin Sangoku Musou 4 (aka Dynasty Warriors 5) stayed at the number one spot with 129,166, while the PSP was yet again denied a number one spot with RPG Tales of Eternia, managing 80,650 sales. The only other entry in the top ten was a new Harvest Moon title for the GameCube, which totaled just 29,823 sales. Hardware sales were a little brisker than software, though, with the release of Tales of Eternia pushing the PSP to the top of the pile again with a 35.51 percent market share, with 47,633 units sold. The PlayStation 2 was next with 44,228 sales for a 32.97 percent share of the market, followed by the Nintendo DS at 19.20 percent, the Game Boy Advance at 9.48 percent, the GameCube at 2.71 percent and the Xbox at 0.13 percent.

TW

LW

Title

Publisher

Format

Release Date

1

1

Shin Sangoku Musou 4

Koei

PS2

2005.02.24

2

NE

Tales of Eternia

Namco

PSP

2005.03.03

3

3

Rockman EXE 5: Team of Colonel

Capcom

GBA

2005.02.24

4

2

Star Fox Assault

Nintendo

GC

2005.02.24

5

6

Dragon Ball Z 3

Bandai

PS2

2005.02.10

6

NE

Bokujou Monogatari: Shiawase no Shi

Marvelous

GC

2005.03.03

7

4

Another Code: 2tsu no Kioku

Nintendo

DS

2005.02.24

8

6

Devil May Cry 3

Capcom

PS2

2005.02.17

9

5

Jissen Pachi-Slot Hisshouhou: Hokuto no Ken Plus

Sammy

PS2

2005.02.24

10

9

Namco Museum

Namco

PSP

2005.02.24

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About the Author

David Jenkins

Blogger

David Jenkins ([email protected]) is a freelance writer and journalist working in the UK. As well as being a regular news contributor to Gamasutra.com, he also writes for newsstand magazines Cube, Games TM and Edge, in addition to working for companies including BBC Worldwide, Disney, Amazon and Telewest.

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