
All Kamen Rider: Rider Generation 2 - 12.928.Super Dangan-Ronpa 2: Sayonara Zetsubou Gakuen - 13.646.Kobitodzukan: Kobito Kansatsu Set - 14.653.Wii Sports Resort with Wii Remote Plus - 15.706.All Kamen Rider: Rider Generation 2 - 20.459.Kirby's Dream Collection: Special Edition - 21.001.Tohoku Daigaku Karei Igaku Kenkyuusho - Kawashima Ryuuta Kyouju Kanshuu - Mono Sugoku Nou o Kitaeru 5-Funkan no Oni Training - 31.792.Dragon Quest X: Mezameshi Itsutsu no Shuzoku Online - 367.148.Japanese software chart (30th July - 5th August) No PlayStation Vita titles made the top 20. Pokémon Black and White 2 was third, while in fourth place was the new Brain Training, which has possibly the longest video game name ever: Tohoku Daigaku Karei Igaku Kenkyuusho - Kawashima Ryuuta Kyouju Kanshuu - Mono Sugoku Nou o Kitaeru 5-Funkan no Oni Training.Įight of the top 10 games were on Nintendo platforms. 2 was second with sales of 213,000, down from 621,000 last week. (A Wii U version of Dragon Quest 10, which will offer cross-platform play with the original, is currently in development.)Įlsewhere in the software chart, New Super Mario Bros. And, not only that, it is an MMO for the ageing Wii - a console Nintendo intends to replace in a matter of months.

However, it's worth remembering that Dragon Quest 10 is an MMO. Famitsu's alternative numbers clocked the game at 420,000 sales instead - perhaps more accurate, if the discrepency is whether the game's Black Wii and Dragon Quest 10 console bundles were counted.Įither way, it's still a big difference from the Dragon Quest series' previous major launches, which have racked up staggering sales of over two million copies in their respective launch weeks.

In comparison, PlayStation Vita sales sunk to just 9038 units.ĭragon Quest 10 sold 367,148 units according to Japanese software company Media-Create (via NeoGAF). The house of Mario shifted another 124,415 3DS consoles last week, around three-quarters of which were of the recently-launched 3DS XL model. Wii MMO Dragon Quest 10 has stormed to the top of the Japanese software charts, in another week ruled by sales of (and on) Nintendo platforms.
