NintendObserver’s select content on Media Create.
Funny detail. Even though a Deluxe Edition for Dragon Ball FighterZ launched the week before on PlayStation 4 with DLCs at a cheaper price than the Nintendo Switch standalone version of the game, the version on Switch is now outselling the PS4's Deluxe Edition.
If you ask me, only a PS5 will be able to stop the Switch's Japanese streak this time around.
And Peachette leads Japan once more.
Despite the recent shake-up, Nintendo Switch software still represent more than half of the games in charts.
Well that didn't last long.
I'll never forget what you did, Sora. (To be fair, that couldn't have happened if it wasn't also for Resident Evil 2.)
To be honest though, for such a high profile game, announced since 2013, not to reach a million at launch in its home country, on the current home console with the largest install base, somebody at Square Enix must be wishing that game launched on Nintendo Switch.
48 weeks. 48 WEEKS. SORA Y U DO DIS!!!!!!
Sora y u do dis. (Actually, now that I think about it, maybe we'll see him later in Smash Ultimate.)
Just like the 3DS in its heydays, the Switch still represents half of the best-selling titles in this slowest month of the year.
If Kingdom Hearts III doesn't stop the Switch's streak I don't think anything can.
I really didn't expect Ace Combat 7 to pull sales of over 200,000 units.
While most of the games that came back in charts were on PS4, most of the games that left were on Nintendo Switch.
The holiday season's annual sales boom is now entirely over.
And this one's for Peachette.
It's gonna be two years now and to my knowledge, Breath of the Wild never left the Japanese Top 20 since its launch.
Meanwhile, Mario Kart 8 Deluxe crosses two million units sold on the Japanese market.
I used to think it would take fall 2019 for the Switch to surpass the PS4 in Japan, but at the rate of things I'm more looking at E3 2019 or even sooner.
And Smash Ultimate rules the New Year.