Draxon Gamer
Banned
I found some data that might interest some folks. I was cruising on some ancient gamer boards and found someone who linked to an archive of old PC Data information detailing the best selling PC games from 1993-1998:
I then found this image later through link hopping that shows sales information from 1993-1999, adding an extra year from the same source:
The user uploaded the image with Imgur, so I saved it to reupload it again later when it gets taken down on the 15th 3 days from now when Imgur erases all images not attached to a registered account.
The biggest differences between both lists is that 7th Guest is knocked off in the last one and Diablo is added.
I never realized how big Myst and Microsoft Flight Simulator actually were, and I'm surprised people huddled around a 1990 era PC monitor to play Monopoly. I am glad Dark Forces made the list, as that was one of the key revolutionary FPS games of the time alongside Terminator Future Shock that launched the same year.
It's US-based sales and only the top 10, but I suppose that's better than nothing. I know there's a complete list with 100 games, but I don't know if there's anyone who's archived and uploaded the full list to the internet.
# | Game | Publisher | #Sold |
1. | Myst | Broderbund | 3,822,638 |
2. | Microsoft Flight Simulator | Microsoft | 2,369,906 |
3. | Doom II | GT Interactive | 1,815,882 |
4. | Doom Shareware | id Software | 1,361,943 |
5. | Riven: The Sequel to Myst | Broderbund | 1,061,226 |
6. | Warcraft II | Cendant | 1,020,623 |
7. | SimCity 2000 | Electronic Arts | 1,019,345 |
8. | The 7th Guest | Virgin Interactive | 929,611 |
9. | Star Wars: Dark Forces | LucasArts | 928,469 |
10. | Monopoly | Hasbro Interactive | 869,709 |
I then found this image later through link hopping that shows sales information from 1993-1999, adding an extra year from the same source:
The user uploaded the image with Imgur, so I saved it to reupload it again later when it gets taken down on the 15th 3 days from now when Imgur erases all images not attached to a registered account.
The biggest differences between both lists is that 7th Guest is knocked off in the last one and Diablo is added.
I never realized how big Myst and Microsoft Flight Simulator actually were, and I'm surprised people huddled around a 1990 era PC monitor to play Monopoly. I am glad Dark Forces made the list, as that was one of the key revolutionary FPS games of the time alongside Terminator Future Shock that launched the same year.
It's US-based sales and only the top 10, but I suppose that's better than nothing. I know there's a complete list with 100 games, but I don't know if there's anyone who's archived and uploaded the full list to the internet.
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