Our Properties: Gamasutra GameCareerGuide IndieGames Indie Royale GDC IGF Game Developer Magazine GAO
My Message close
Latest News
spacer View All spacer
 
February 9, 2012
 
Analyst questions validity of unusual January NPD results [2]
 
DICE 2012: Blizzard's Pearce on World Of Warcraft's launch hangover
 
DICE 2012: Insomniac's Price on Quality Of Life, ditching the 'Loser' badge [1]
spacer
Latest Features
spacer View All spacer
 
February 9, 2012
 
arrow Principles of an Indie Game Bottom Feeder [14]
 
arrow Postmortem: CyberConnect 2's Solatorobo: Red the Hunter [1]
 
arrow Jerked Around by the Magic Circle - Clearing the Air Ten Years Later [39]
spacer
Latest Blogs
spacer View All     Post     RSS spacer
 
February 9, 2012
 
Audio Passes: Success Through Layering
 
What the current RPG can learn from Diablo 1
 
Double Fine's Kickstarter Windfall: Will Patronage Supplant Traditional Game Publishing? [5]
 
The Principles of Game Monetization
 
Did DoubleFine Just break the publishing model for good? [8]
spacer
Latest Jobs
spacer View All     Post a Job     RSS spacer
 
February 9, 2012
 
Airtight Games
Art Director
 
Telltale Games
Core Technology - Senior Systems Engineer
 
High 5 Games
Technical Artist
 
XEOPlay Inc
Game Developer (Mobile)
 
Kabam
Lead Software Engineer - Flash
 
Kabam
Lead Software Engineer-Ruby
spacer
Latest Press Releases
spacer View All     RSS spacer
 
February 9, 2012
 
Web Fiesta Revolutionizes
Browser Gaming with
Full...
 
The greatest videogame
endings of all time...
 
TRION WORLDS AND CHINESE
ONLINE GIANT SHANDA
GAMES...
 
Dragons vs. Unicorns Goes
Solo
 
Spidermann named our game
spacer
About
spacer Editor-In-Chief/News Director:
Kris Graft
Features Director:
Christian Nutt
Senior Contributing Editor:
Brandon Sheffield
News Editors:
Frank Cifaldi, Tom Curtis, Mike Rose, Eric Caoili, Kris Graft
Editors-At-Large:
Leigh Alexander, Chris Morris
Advertising:
Jennifer Sulik
Recruitment:
Gina Gross
 
Feature Submissions
 
Comment Guidelines
Sponsor
News

  Nintendo's DSi, DSi XL Get Price Cuts
by Leigh Alexander [PC, Console/PC, Mobile Console]
4 comments
Share on Twitter
Share on Facebook RSS
 
 
August 30, 2010
 
Nintendo's DSi, DSi XL Get Price Cuts

Nintendo's latest iterations of its portable hardware are getting their first price reductions: the camera-equipped, digital download-ready DSi will get a new $149.99 tag, and the upsized, larger-screened DSi XL will be priced at $169.99 -- representing $20 knocked off of the price of each.

The earlier DS Lite will stay at $129.99, the company says. Price reductions in the most recent models are consistent with Nintendo's past strategy in the evolution of its hardware.

Historically, the company announces upgrades, then price-reduces earlier models to drive install bases. In this case, the price cut to newer models follows a promising showing of its upcoming 3DS at E3 earlier this summer.

Gamasutra analyst Matt Matthews observed recent NPD data and concluded that sales of these newer DS models have reached the point where their sales outperform the earlier DS Lite. Combined, the sales remain fairly constant at 300,000 units in most recent months, even as other hardware platforms have seen significant unit sales declines.

However, Nintendo DS software hasn't remained so steady, seeing visible contractions overall in a once-booming market, particularly on the casual and kids side.

In general, price cuts to hardware motivate software sales, and often are instituted with specific intent to do so. However, for 2010, the system's software is thus far only down 6 percent year over year, comparing favorably with the NPD-observed 8 percent decline for the overall game software biz.

Nintendo says total hardware unit sales for the entire DS family to date have reached 42.3 million in the U.S. alone, according to NPD data.
 
   
 
Comments

George Monroy
profile image
Waiting to upgrade from a DS lite to a 3D one.

Christian Keichel
profile image
"However, Nintendo DS software hasn't remained so steady, seeing visible contractions overall in a once-booming market, particularly on the casual and kids side. "
and a little bit later
"However, for 2010, the system's software is thus far only down 6 percent year over year, comparing favorably with the NPD-observed 8 percent decline for the overall game software biz. "

So the Nintendo DS software is doing better then the overall software market and they are selling a steady ammount of consoles every month? Strange way to put this in words in the article.

Eric Kwan
profile image
I think that could also imply that DS software sales were slumping last year and that they're bottoming out, but I guess the language is too vague for either case.

Jonathan Jennings
profile image
I Hope nintendo really capitalizes on the 3ds's technology, I was not impressed with it at E3 but their seems to be a lot of excitement surrounding it .


none
 
Comment:
 




 
UBM Techweb
Game Network
Game Developers Conference | GDC Europe | GDC Online | GDC China | Gamasutra | Game Developer Magazine | Game Advertising Online
Game Career Guide | Independent Games Festival | Indie Royale | IndieGames

Other UBM TechWeb Networks
Business Technology | Business Technology Events | Telecommunications & Communications Providers

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service | Contact Us | Copyright © UBM TechWeb, All Rights Reserved.