PhatSaqs said:Hell why not. Throw millions at Gooch for LO + BD or throw millions at B/N for exclusitivity to an established series. I guess hindsight is always 20/20 tho so you never know. Just a thought.
24k for 360, haven't seen any other hardware numbers yet.sphinx said:did we ever get the leaked famitsu HW numbers we always get on wednesday (or is it thursday)?
I have been searching to find how many 360 units did ToV sell but can't find it...
sphinx said:did we ever get the leaked famitsu HW numbers we always get on wednesday (or is it thursday)?
I have been searching to find how many 360 units did ToV sell but can't find it...
botticus said:24k for 360, haven't seen any other hardware numbers yet.
Jtyettis said:With the last week sales numbers from Famitsu and the what they have in the pipeline going forward I stand by my prediction that they will easily hit the million mark before it is all said and done this gen. Not saying a whole lot, but it will be essentially double what they did the previous gen in the territory. With SO4 at least a timed exclusive how well has the series done there in the past? IU should help spur sales for a bit as well.
PSGames said:Is that the highest week ever for xbox?
All good points and all probably true. Except we have no idea if there will be sequels to BD and LO. Hopefully we hear something at TGS.jimbo said:Except that BD did what ToV is doing right now on a user base that's just a fraction of what it is now. BD bascially sold to half the user base.
In reality though, I think BD has a chance of doing lot more long-term for the 360 than ToV in Japan. A BD2, done right, would help the 360 quite a bit more in Japan one year down the road. One, it would probably sell a lot better than ToV on its now larger user base, and two it's a branding thing: Blue Dragon box, exclusive to the 360.
Same for Lost Odyssey in the west.
I think MS did the right thing. Both BD and LO can become established XBOX JRPG franchises with a quality sequel for each game. And the key word here is Xbox.
In all honesty, with how fast they got both games up and running, and with very early technology and development tools, both LO and BD turned out really great. They are in all aspects first generation games and can't help but feel rush jobs on both so for how fast they got them out, and still coming up with a quality product, Mystwalker did a really amazing job.
xero273 said:sinobi blog said 24K 360s
PhatSaqs said:All good points and all probably true. Except we have no idea if there will be sequels to BD and LO. Hopefully we hear something at TGS.
jimbo said:Except that BD did what ToV is doing right now on a user base that's just a fraction of what it is now. BD bascially sold to half the user base.
In reality though, I think BD has a chance of doing lot more long-term for the 360 than ToV in Japan. A BD2, done right, would help the 360 quite a bit more in Japan one year down the road. One, it would probably sell a lot better than ToV on its now larger user base, and two it's a branding thing: Blue Dragon box, exclusive to the 360.
Same for Lost Odyssey in the west.
I think MS did the right thing. Both BD and LO can become established XBOX JRPG franchises with a quality sequel for each game. And the key word here is Xbox.
In all honesty, with how fast they got both games up and running, and with very early technology and development tools, both LO and BD turned out really great. They are in all aspects first generation games and can't help but feel rush jobs on both so for how fast they got them out, and still coming up with a quality product, Mystwalker did a really amazing job.
As is the matching doesn't work like a search engine. It uses SQL's "LIKE", which allows you to find something that matches a certain pattern, including wildcards for single characters (_) or an indefinite number of characters (%). But if you give it "Emblem Fire" it's not going to find the Fire Emblem games, and if you give it "Wii -Sports", it's going to look for a game with the exact name "Wii -Sports".Opiate said:Not knowing much about your algorithms, Josh: wouldn't "Wii -Sports" be a feasible method for such a task? Or are hyphens reserved for other uses?
Paracelsus said:Word of mouth (?) is that is nothing but a shitty port of a PSU, which isn't really a masterpiece.
If Sega ports it in the States, I wouldn't mind trying it, though.
I'd imagine displaying the relevant SQL to allow people to throw in their own NOTs would be easiest. Might also consider introducing some obscure special character (can't imagine ^ is used in many game titles) to denote the exclusion, but that would require some string manip before submitting the query.JoshuaJSlone said:As is the matching doesn't work like a search engine. It uses SQL's "LIKE", which allows you to find something that matches a certain pattern, including wildcards for single characters (_) or an indefinite number of characters (%). But if you give it "Emblem Fire" it's not going to find the Fire Emblem games, and if you give it "Wii -Sports", it's going to look for a game with the exact name "Wii -Sports".
You can even look for all games that have a hyphen in their title.
alske said:I actually agree. Hopefully MS sees it the same way. Mostly because both are some of favorite games released so far this generation.
jimbo said:If you stop and think about where they came from, it's all the more impressive considering they were done by a "scraped-together" developer using a lot of outside help on a brand new console. Even though it had Sakaguchi, when you were reading about Artoon(Blinx developer) coding BD and the Unreal Engine for LO even though I was pulling for them, I know deep down in the back of my head I couldn't help but think disaster back then.
If in a year or so, Mystwalker actually manages to pull itself together and become a real developer, with large internal studios and Gooch at the top....then, what MS and Sakaguchi did is not only help bring about two great games, but also gave birth to another Japanese quality developer. If Cry-On turns out just as good or better, than they will have a damn good track record and anything they put out from that point on will be taken a lot more serious.
The only question remains though, will MS be able to keep them exclusive, or at least 90% exclusive the way Square has been in the past?
Jonnyram said:Deal? Namco made games for the 360 before the PS3 because the development environment was ready. Nothing more. There'll be a PS3 port later for sure. They just decided not to screw themselves like they did with Symphonia, by announcing the port before the 360 version even had chance to sell.
alske said:I can't imagine that either games made MS money though. I'd be very surprised to see sequels. I do think it would be fairly forward thinking of MS to get some more XBox exclusive franchises. However, I'm not sure who actually owns the IP in this case, but considering the BD DS game I'm going to guess MW.
Given LO's total global sales I don't see why it couldn't have made a (moderate) profit. It's solid, but it doesn't seem like a "crazy budget" affair.alske said:I can't imagine that either games made MS money though. I'd be very surprised to see sequels.
Durante said:Given LO's total global sales I don't see why it couldn't have made a (moderate) profit. It's solid, but it doesn't seem like a "crazy budget" affair.
Edit: then again I forgot about marketing costs (I don't watch TV so I don't know how much - if any - there was).
I think the exact opposite actually. I prefer AW on handhelds by far. And for FE I like a mixture of Handheld and console titles (I love FE on-the-go but I also adore the additions the Gamecube/Wii versions added)Phife Dawg said:I think what would be best is to keep FE on the DS and move AW to the Wii - I think that AW could benefit a lot from a move to the Wii. They could do a lot of cool stuff with the editor, the map sizes, units etc.
Something to look into; I didn't even know that was possible. My knowledge of PHP and SQL has been growing in haphazard ways over the last year as I either run across some new capability or realize I need to.Stumpokapow said:Josh, you could consider switching some of your LIKE searches to FULLTEXT index searches and engage boolean search mode if you really need to.
dabra said:Famitsu
Banjo 1 405.944
Banjo 2 194.173
Are you sure Namco didn't get what they wanted as well?Paracelsus said:It hasn't been mutually beneficial at all. Basically MS is the one who has gotten the most out of the deal.
It's also in relation to the userbase. Namco knows how many 360 owners there are in Japan, they know what to expect that's reasonable from a 600K userbase. In the same token Sega thought they knew what to expect from a high quality JRPG on a 2.2 Million userbase. It'd be silly for Namco to expect half or so of a console userbase to pick up their game in the first week.Paracelsus said:Hcoregamer00 keeps screaming "BOMBA" at Valkyria Chronicles all around the board, a brand new niche IP with a budget clearly lower than ToV. Its Japanese LTD is 130k.
icecream said:Are you sure Namco didn't get what they wanted as well?
It's also in relation to the userbase. Namco knows how many 360 owners there are in Japan, they know what to expect that's reasonable from a 600K userbase. In the same token Sega thought they knew what to expect from a high quality JRPG on a 2.2 Million userbase. It'd be silly for Namco to expect half or so of a console userbase to pick up their game in the first week.
Scale plays an important part in sales expectations.
Why would you think that the idea of Pinatas would fly in Japan of all countries? Does the average Japanese even know what a Pinata is? For Halo we at least know that there's an avid niche fanbase for these sort of titles.jimbo said:LO probably broke even, considering they were also using the UE which I am sure helped save a lot of money. But again, I seriously doubt MS expected anything other than what it got out of it. To bad LO didn't do better in Japan, but then again, I will never figure that market out. ToV would be WAAAAAAAY down on my list compared to those games, in fact, I doubt I will even play it after trying the demo. That's what's so hard about Japan. Just when you think you figured something out......they buy the complete opposite and shun the stuff you were certain they would like. Example: Halo > Ninja Gaiden, Viva Pinata. WTF?
I like AW on DS too, I just think they could do a lot more with AW on Wii than what they did or could do with FE on Wii.grandjedi6 said:I think the exact opposite actually. I prefer AW on handhelds by far. And for FE I like a mixture of Handheld and console titles (I love FE on-the-go but I also adore the additions the Gamecube/Wii versions added)
Well I too think that if it meets publisher's expectations it's a good sign (see Z&W for instance) and I think Namco will get what they expect from the title, but with a lot of publishers posting losses all over the place, going out of business or getting bought out, you do have to question their ways of running things now and again.jimbo said:I agree. I really don't think GAF gives enough credibility to developer's financial forecasting. Surely they can see what we see too, when they plan these things out.
It's like GAF treats all publishers as morons.
Phife Dawg said:Why would you think that the idea of Pinatas would fly in Japan of all countries? Does the average Japanese even know what a Pinata is? For Halo we at least know that there's an avid niche fanbase for these sort of titles.
Plus Tales = established franchise, with a seemingly shrunk-down fanbase but they have a fanbase at least.
It's really not that surprising. The audience for the 360 is very limited. People that want Viva Pinata-type games don't own a 360, they own a Wii.jimbo said:Just because of the type of game that it was. I just figured animal raising sims would go a lot better there than western fps with aliens would.
Tron 2.0 said:It's really not that surprising. The audience for the 360 is very limited. People that want Viva Pinata-type games don't own a 360, they own a Wii.
Japanese that are buying a 360 want Halo and Ninja Gaiden. They don't necessarily want Viva Pinata.
They liked it better than Viva Pinata.jimbo said:Well they didn't like NG 2 too much.
Jonnyram said:DS Lite 60,434
PSP 58,501
Wii 38,506
Xbox 360 24,962
PS3 9,673
PS2 8,503
![]()
Jonnyram said:DS Lite 60,434
PSP 58,501
Wii 38,506
Xbox 360 24,962
PS3 9,673
PS2 8,503
![]()
Symphonia was just one of many RPG choices when it came out on PS2; Vesperia would be releasing into a much more open genre field on PS3. You're right that sales probably wouldn't rock the world, but it seems likely it could at least double the numbers for, what, an extra 10% dev cost?Sage00 said:ToS GCN only sold around 20k less than ToS PS2 iirc. And that's with PS2's massive userbase.
I don't see a ToV PS3 port setting the world on fire.
Jonnyram said:DS Lite 60,434
PSP 58,501
Wii 38,506
Xbox 360 24,962
PS3 9,673
PS2 8,503
![]()
The times they are a-changin'Jonnyram said:DS Lite 60,434
PSP 58,501
Wii 38,506
Xbox 360 24,962
PS3 9,673
PS2 8,503
AFreak said:If only Tales of Vesperia was on PS3, those numbers would be even better.
first time posting in (Sales thread lol).Jonnyram said:DS Lite 60,434
PSP 58,501
Wii 38,506
Xbox 360 24,962
PS3 9,673
PS2 8,503
![]()
Shiggie said:first time posting in npd.
Oley shit 360:lol
Go Go DS:lol