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In the 05/17/2017 edition:

The Best-Selling Nintendo Consoles And Games Of All Time, Ranked

By Anonymous on May 16, 2017 01:13 am

The Best-Selling Nintendo Consoles Of All Time


Nintendo has released 12 consoles over more than three decades, but they haven't all been hits. It's been 11 years since the launch of Nintendo's last true smash, the Wii.

Will the Switch live up to its hype and become one of the most important consoles of the century? The early numbers are in. Here's how the Switch ranks, in terms of sales, against Nintendo's best (and worst) consoles.

Nintendo regularly releases up-to-date sales numbers of its current generation games, including those on the Wii, Wii U, DS, 3DS and Switch. When that information was available, it was included.

Image Credit: chrisjohnsson/iStock


1. DS (2004) - 154.02 Million Units


Let's start at the top. After 15 years of the revolving door of Game Boy releases, the DS broke new ground as the first handheld console to feature Wi-Fi connectivity, an on-board microphone and dual screens. The DS also came in six basic colors, with too many special editions to count.

Image credit: Evan Amos


Best-Selling Game: New Super Mario Bros.


3D characters on a throwback 2D background give a unique-yet-classic look to this best-selling game (30.8 million copies!) on the best-selling Nintendo console.

The story is familiar: Bowser kidnaps Peach and our heroic plumbers are tasked with rescuing her from his spiky, reptilian capture.

Image credits: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Nintendogs


Nintendogs is the way Gen-X moms and dads satiated their children's desire to adopt a pet while preparing them for the real thing. Wash, walk and play with your digital dog until the batteries on your DS run out.

Nearly 24 million copies were sold.

Image credit: Nintendo


2. Game Boy (1989) - 118.69 Million Units


Nintendo created the handheld gaming console market when it released the Game Boy in 1989. The real magic of this medium, in terms of pure sales numbers, is that parents of siblings couldn't buy just one.

And then, when Game Boy Color came out, parents had to buy yet another.

Image credit: kaarsten/iStock


Best-Selling Game: Tetris


Nintendo bundled Tetris with Game Boy consoles, making the maddening brick-stacking game a household name by the late '80s. The game became so popular, across pretty much every device with a screen, that it even has a neurological phenomenon that shares its name.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Paperboy


Originally an arcade game, this black and white gaming classic filled time on road trips for gamers of a certain age. Most of that time was spent trying to master steering the god forsaken bike relative to the game's unusual cabinet perspective.

Image credit: Nintendo


3. Wii (2006) - 101.63 Million Units


The Wii seemed like the future of the Nintendo brand when it hit the shelves in 2006. The Wiimote controller encouraged a lot of wild flailing and limb swinging (and furniture smashing), while forcing game developers to completely rethink the video game user experience.

Image credit: LoooZaaa/iStock


Best-Selling Game: Wii Sports


With a stunning 82.81 million copies sold, Wii Sports is the best-selling game in Nintendo history primarily because it was bundled with the Wii. But it's still fun for all ages--plenty of nursing homes use the game as a form of low-impact exercise to this very day.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Mario Kart Wii


Playing Mario Kart with a Wiimote mounted in a steering wheel was a gimmick that totally worked. It sold a total of 36.95 million copies.

Image credit: Nintendo


4. Game Boy Advance (2001) - 81.51 Million Units


This was the handheld console that turned Nintendo's handheld game sideways... literally. The buttons moved from the bottom to a slightly more ergonomic location on either side of the screen.

Image credit: CTRPhotos


Best-Selling Game: Pokemon Ruby & Sapphire


Handheld Pokemon games have always been huge sellers for Nintendo. Ruby and Sapphire introduced double battles and multi battles to the Pokemon repertoire.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Castlevania Aria of Sorrow


If it ain't broke, release a game that is admittedly similar to its predecessors. Improvements in gameplay and design and a new batch of characters were more than enough to solidify this among the most memorable games for the GBA.

Image credit: Nintendo


5. NES (1985) - 61.91 Million Units


Nintendo certainly made a splash with its first U.S. voyage into at-home video game consoles. The OG grey box with the cartridges you blew into was, at the time, a revitalizing force in the tanking video game industry.

Image credit: robtek/iStock


Best-Selling Game: Super Mario Bros.


If you didn't spend the latter half of the '80s playing this game, you were doing it wrong.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Duck Hunt


From the iconic Zapper gun to the floppy-eared dog that pops up throughout the game, Duck Hunt served as a stalwart b-side to the best-selling Super Mario Bros.

Image credit: Nintendo


6. 3DS (2011) - 58.85 Million Units


Nintendo announced the successor to the DS at E3 2010. After disappointing sales numbers for the first six months after it was released, Nintendo opted to significantly reduce the price of the 3DS, giving the console the boost it needed.

Image credit: chrisjohnsson/iStock


Best-Selling Game: Pokemon X and Y


Pokemon X and Y are the first Pokemon games to have 3D polygonal graphics (and a 3D gameplay experience). The connectivity of the 3DS allows players to easily initiate battles with others, including strangers, online.

Combined, X and Y sold 16.11 million units as of March 31, 2017, narrowly beating out Pokemon Sun and Moon (15.44 million)

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds


Early '90s nostalgia meets 3D in this successor to the hit 1991 Super NES title, A Link to the Past. Both games are widely praised.

Image credit: Nintendo


7. Super NES (1991) - 49.1 Million Units


The 16-bit Sega Genesis was released a year ahead of the Super Nintendo, giving Team Sonic a huge head start. But Nintendo made up the difference in sales and then some, to the tune of approximately 18 million game systems.

Image credit: chrisjohnsson/iStock


Best-Selling Game: Super Mario World


Mario and Luigi take a vacation to Dinosaur Land and end up spending the whole time working to rescue Peach (again) from Bowser's castle. This game introduced Yoshi to the masses.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: NBA Jam


Arguably the hottest sports title of the 1990s--on fire, if you will--NBA Jam earned Midway over $1 billion in arcades alone. The SNES port proved popular too, especially given how easy it was to pick up and play.

Fun fact: You can play this port of the arcade classic as President Bill Clinton and FLOTUS Hillary Clinton.

Image credit: Nintendo


8. N64 (1996) - 32.93 Million Units


An entire generation of game nerds (and laymen alike) spent a fair amount of their childhoods with this console, saving their pennies for rumble packs and singing along to the Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3 soundtrack.

Popular though it was, the console was still wildly outperformed by its contemporary, the Sony PlayStation.

Image credit: robtek/iStock


Best-Selling Game: Super Mario 64


In 1996, Mario triple-jumped into a new era of 3D gameplay. This was the first Super Mario game to utilize complex 3D worlds instead of the linear scroll format. Ya! Woohoo! Whoopie!

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Goldeneye 007


It is pretty astounding how well this first-person shooter, featuring James Bond combatting Russian spies, holds up. We recently named it one of the hottest games of 1997.

Image credit: LoooZaaa


9. GameCube (2001) - 21.74 Million Units


The GameCube was the first Nintendo console to use optical disks as its storage medium. The mini-disk format (which made it incompatible with DVDs and audio disks) and lack of backwards compatibility with other eras of Nintendo games prevented the GameCube from becoming a top-selling console.

Image credit: CTRPhotos


Best-Selling Game: Super Smash Bros. Melee


The graphically superior younger brother of the original Smash was described by GameSpot's Miguel Lopez in 2001 as "Nintendo's tribute to itself." And that's honestly what Melee is. It has a seemingly endless supply of secrets, hidden Easter eggs and 11 new characters you must unlock through gameplay.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker


Though few people invested in the GameCube, Wind Waker is widely considered to be one of the best Zelda games of all time.

Image credit: Nintendo


10. Wii U (2012) - 13.56 Million Units


This was a console that never reached its potential. The touch-screen controller was too big and too tethered to the stationary machine to make much sense. It was a gimmick that didn't really pan out.

Image credit: Nintendo


Best-Selling Game: Mario Kart 8


Mario Kart 8 combines a fun core racing experience with beautiful HD graphics. It makes sense that almost two thirds of all Wii U owners--8.31 million--invested in the game.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Bayonetta 2


Rated a perfect 10 in Mark Walton's GameSpot review, this action game sees its titular character traveling to the Gates of Hell to save her friend Jeanne. The soundtrack features dynamic music during boss battles which swells and falls based on the action onscreen.

Image credit: Nintendo


11. Switch (2017) - 2.7 Million Units Sold (5-7.2 Million Projected For 2017)


The Switch, the baby of the Nintendoverse, is on-pace to be a sorely needed hit for the gaming giant. It sold 2.74 million consoles in its first month, becoming Nintendo's fastest-selling console ever.

Nintendo projects to sell between 5 and 7.2 million consoles by the end of 2017 and 10 million units by this time next year.

Image credit: Nintendo


Best-Selling Game: The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild


With 2.76 million sold (and counting), Nintendo sold more copies of this game than it did actual Switch consoles in the spring of 2017.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Snipperclips


Snipperclips is the best-selling digital download game for the Switch. It's a cooperative puzzle-solving game that challenges players to snip their sentient paper characters into various shapes to solve puzzles.

Image credit: Nintendo


12. Virtual Boy (1995) - 770,000 Units


Last, and certainly least--the Virtual Boy is the worst-selling Nintendo console ever. It was discontinued less than a year after its 1995 launch because it was giving people headaches.

Image credit: Evan Amos


Best-Selling Game: Mario Tennis


Mario Tennis was bundled with the Virtual Boy console. Mario Tennis, like the rest of the Virtual Boy games, didn't have the ability to save. Considering the poor battery life, even for 1995, it was pretty much impossible to make any meaningful progress in this game.

Image credit: Nintendo


Another Memorable Game: Waterworld


If Waterworld weren't already synonymous with a serious lack of ROI, there was also a Waterworld game released for Virtual Boy (along with PC and SNES).

In it, you zap guys on 26th-century-jet-skis before they can capture the innocent folks scattered across the playing field. If you can even make out the playing field, that is.

Image credit: Nintendo



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