The 20 best-selling console/handheld games, not originally bundled.
1. Wii Play (Wii – 24.43 million)
2. Wii Fit (Wii – 22.5 million)
3. Nintendogs (DS – 22.27 million, all five versions combined)
4. Pokémon Red, Blue, and Green (Game Boy – 20.08 million approximately: 10.23 million in Japan,[46] 9.85 million in US)
5. New Super Mario Bros. (DS – 19.94 million)
6. Mario Kart Wii (Wii – 18.36 million)
7. Super Mario Bros. 3 (NES – 18 million)
8. Brain Age: Train Your Brain in Minutes a Day! (DS – 17.41 million)
9. Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas (PS2 - 17.33 million)
10. Pokémon Diamond and Pearl (DS – 16.81 million)
11. Mario Kart DS (DS – 16.09 million)
12. Gran Turismo 3: A-Spec (PS2 – 14.89 million shipped)
13. Pokémon Gold and Silver (Game Boy Color – 14.51 million approximately: 7.6 million in US,[19] 6.91 million in Japan)
14. Super Mario Land (Game Boy – 14 million)
15. Brain Age 2: More Training in Minutes a Day! (DS – 13.71 million)
16. Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire (GBA – 13 million)
17. Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen (GBA – 11.82 million)
18. Super Mario 64 (N64 – 11 million)
19. Gran Turismo (PS1 – 10.85 million shipped)
20. Animal Crossing: Wild World (DS – 10.79 million)
The rest of those are generally actual games though (except Wii Fit, but that's all overweight soccer moms believing that Nintendo can help them not be fat). The Pokemon series, as much as I don't enjoy them, have their following. They're competent, incredibly addicting games. Hell, I own Brain Age, the game debuted at 20 bucks in Canada, I can only imagine it was even cheaper in the States and came out at the height of that sudoku craze. Nintendogs also falls into that weird addicting Tomagotchi thing that people just love, I understand that too. Wii Play however, is just plain terrible. Like, one of the worst excuses for a game ever to be released at full price.It's really telling that only half of those games are games I'd consider "hardcore friendly" and only ONE (GTA: San Andreas) is rated higher than E for Everyone.
Please don't get started. No one will play Pokemon with me now since I'm the only one who knows about EV training.Pokemon not hardcore? Shall we discuss EV training?
Except it's not really full price. Wii Play, which comes with a remote, is about $5-10 more than a standalone remote.Wii Play however, is just plain terrible. Like, one of the worst excuses for a game ever to be released at full price.
Yeah, it's a good feeling to take the EV trained ones on the online Pokemon Battle Revolution, find your little Raichu and Venusaur up against Mewtwo and Groudon, and whip the shit out of that 13-year-old's legendaries.I had a properly EV trained standard team that could regularly take out teams of ubers, I was so proud.
Except it's not really full price. Wii Play, which comes with a remote, is about $5-10 more than a standalone remote.Wii Play however, is just plain terrible. Like, one of the worst excuses for a game ever to be released at full price.