First a correction. It was 3.81m sales in Dec-2009, not 3.91m like I kept saying above.
kame-sennin said:
My only argument is that NSMBW is responsible for Wii not just doing better than previous holidays, but doing better than PS2, DS, or any other console in any December in console history.
So the assertion is that NSMB Wii alone is responsible for at least 500K (amount Dec-2009 sales were above any other system's December sales) Wiis sold in December 2009? If so, I do not agree with the "alone" part. Pushed it over the top to sell another 500K systems for anyone who wasn't sure? Maybe. Almost impossible to know for sure, but not out of the question.
kame-sennin said:
To further clarify, in my view there are only two possible explanations for Wii December 2009 sales:
1) Wii Sports/Wii Fit/Mario Kart pushed the Wii into sold out status for two years (indisputable) and thus, when the Wii was finally available in December 2009, these games were the primary drivers of the record breaking sales.
Along with NSMB Wii and price drop (and $50 GC @ Wal-Mart to some degree; though, it's unclear how much that played into NPD's reporting, since they only estimate for Wal-Mart sales; if that was part of it, maybe Nintendo "helped" NPD out on the monthly total?). I'm not saying that if NSMB Wii had not come out and no price drop that it would've sold the same 3.8m systems. Price drop kick started Wii momentum in late September (as seen above) and NSMB Wii could've easily shifted it into another gear. In 2009, while the price drop was long overdue and necessary, I lamented the fact that we
wouldn't be getting a true read on Wii's selling strength in December without shortages and without a price drop. Therefore, we never got a real baseline on what Wii could sell if it was actually available in December for people to buy.
NSMB Wii definitely helped, but it might've still sold more than 3.3m (DS's Dec-2009 total and second-highest monthly total in U.S.) with SMGalaxy 2 in that slot and price drop with availability (and other back catalog).
kame-sennin said:
I think you're splitting hairs.
Not when the original quote talks about NSMB Wii "single-handedly" (or "lion's share") pushing Wii sales in Dec-2009. I'm pretty sure your quote in an MC thread some months ago when this was brought up then was pretty similar, too. The clear meaning is that the other factors (e.g. the fact that it was December, the fact that Wii was actually readily available in December for the first time) weren't real big, and that it was NSMB Wii carrying the Wii for the month. That I completely disagree with.
kame-sennin said:
If a console sells based on a catalog of games, and one game is the primary driver,
What determines primary driver? Wii Fit Plus sold almost as much as NSMB Wii in December, and Wii Fit already had a long history of being 1:1 purchases with Wiis.
kame-sennin said:
"Drove" does not mean singularly responsible, it simply implies a leadership role. People do this all the time, and it's always clear what they mean. 'Wii Sports drove sales of the Wii',
Wii Sports did almost singularly drive sales of the Wii early on. It wasn't really much of a group effort at first.
kame-sennin said:
'Nintendogs turned the DS around',
Actually, that was Brain Training, and it still didn't explode until Mario Kart, Animal Crossing, and Brain Training 2 came around. i.e. a catalog of games.
kame-sennin said:
The reason why myself and others focus on NSMBW is because:
Fall 2008 dampened things enough to make the monthly sell-outs end. However as discussed already, there is a different mindset for the Christmas season shopper. While some of the shine was off for the Wii through much of 2009, it's a whole different ballgame come Christmastime. Price drop helped start things revving up again, and NSMB Wii definitely helped increase awareness/desire for Wii, too. Then when Christmas shopping season came around (and people are wanting to buy something the other person will like, not evaluating monthly sales trends), "that big item from before that was so popular you couldn't find it and that's still popular now" was available, so they bought it. In record numbers. Some of that awareness was due to NSMB Wii, definitely, but if it was just NSMB Wii without the other games, it wouldn't have sold what it did.
It sounds like you're fine saying that Wii sold what it did in December 2009 because of availability, price drop, and catalog of games with NSMB Wii being the primary game of that catalog. If that's the case, then we'd just be arguing over how "primary" was NSMB Wii in that catalog. Not really much to argue there, as it's somewhat subjective. (again, be aware that Wii Fit Plus sold 2.4m in the same month, so it wasn't like NSMB Wii was the only huge game for Wii that month.)
Does that bolded part sound about right?
Edit:
Kilrogg said:
(although, I would argue that using Wii Fit Plus to prove anything here is dubious in the sense that it wasn't even a sequel so much as an add-on/update).
Nintendo has made it clear that the Balance Board version of Wii Fit Plus has been the main seller of the two versions. That would put the Balance Board version at 1.3m behind NSMB Wii's LTD in the U.S. (8.36m vs. 7.06m), and therefore shouldn't be considered just an expansion on the original as it would be if the $20 version were the main one selling.
Edit2:
Kilrogg said:
But doesn't that make availability a circumstancial factor (i.e it doesn't create any demand, but it allows the demand to translate into sales) as opposed to an actual cause? When I say "NSMB sold 4M systems" I know, hyperbole , I mean it CAUSED the system to reach the 4M milestone. It was the reason why the systems flew off the shelves even more than they usually do in December. Availability was just the enabler for the system to sell more.
That's fine, if you're looking at NSMB Wii as the push to get it that final ways to 3.8m. Don't have a problem with that.
Kilrogg said:
Between a 50-dollar price drop and an actual game (the stuff that actually motivates purchases the most in the first place) that also happens to be the long-awaited sequel to the biggest series in the entire industry (+ all the other games), which do you think had more to do with those record-breaking sales?
The mainstream doesn't typically await games, at all. Much less wait a long time for them (e.g. 18 years). If you're buying something for yourself, $50 may not mean much. If you're buying something for someone else (i.e. most purchases at Christmastime), that $50 can start to look pretty big (and add a $50 WM GC on top of that, which is basically as good as cash to most shoppers in the U.S.). I'm still saying that availability is bigger, but there's a reason people line up hours in advance of a store opening on Black Friday, after all. Price reductions in the Christmas season are big drivers of sales. That's a known quantity.
Kilrogg said:
Really, the point is simply that availability is a circumstancial factor,
Which allows demand to translate into sales, as you said. That circumstantial factor was first readily available to the mainstream Christmas buyers in December 2009, and that, combined with Wii's already high popularity as the "must-have" Christmas item based on reputation from past years and reinforced by the price cut and NSMB Wii (as a part of the catalog that propelled it to be a "must-have" item in the first place) pushed it to such high sales.
Kilrogg said:
the point is that the major, actual driver for the Wii's success at that point was indeed NSMB (and to a lesser extent the other games).
Only in the sense that it helped keep Wii as the "must-have" system for the Christmas shopping season, but this time it was actually in stock!
Kilrogg said:
If you'll allow me to rephrase once and for all: "NSMB was the major driver of hardware sales in December 2009". Is that more acceptable?
A major driver, yes. If you insist on "the", then no.
Kilrogg said:
[Note] If your point is basically that on account of it being December, the system would have sold, say, upwards of 1.5M units even without a price cut or NSMB, well, yeah, I agree.
With price cut (and Wal-Mart GC sale, thought it would've
had to be Nintendo telling NPD what it sold, in that case) and without NSMB Wii, I'd wouldn't be surprised by well over 3m for the month.
Kilrogg said:
But again, did you really believe that just because I said "single-handedly" I meant that the period had absolutely nothing to do with it?
That was kame-sennin's position when we argued this in an MC thread some time ago, so it wasn't out of the question. :/ Edit3: kame-sennin said he didn't mean that, though. See below post.