Well this was expected wasn’t it. Unfortunately I don’t have access to my old posts, but I distinctly remember a debate of sorts that was happening about which console will be the most selling by June 2008. Most of my readers voted for the 360.
In spite of PlayStation 3 sales that are surging, Microsoft is still the first to claim rights to the “10 million sold” crown in the U.S.
Xbox boss Don Mattrick crowed over the high water mark and predicted the sales tally would presage total console dominance. “History has shown us that the first company to reach 10 million in console sales wins the generation battle. We are uniquely positioned to set a new benchmark for the industry,” Mattrick said.
Another milestone reached is the 12 million global membership tally in Xbox Live. The spike in membership is attributed to the recent release of Grand Theft Auto IV and GTA gamers looking for a little multiplayer mayhem on the closed network. Total worldwide sales, says Microsoft, is 19 million.
Cajoling industry analyst Billy Pidgeon into lending his thoughts on the milestone, the analyst added to Mattrick’s remarks, saying in a statement, “Reaching an installed base of 10 million consoles in the U.S. is a significant achievement and an essential milestone on the road to market leadership, [but] perhaps more important is the Xbox 360 worldwide online base–12 million Xbox Live gamers is the largest community in the connected console games sector, which represents the greatest growth opportunity in the console market and where Microsoft has been the leader for two generations.”
Through March, total sales worldwide of current gen consoles is 24.45 million Nintendo Wii units, 19 million Xbox 360s, and 12.85 million PlayStation 3 units.
It’s also worthwhile noting that the Xbox 360 has been on sale for over a year longer than the PlayStation 3 and Wii, and that in the U.S. PlayStation 3 sales are picking up–for the first time since launching, the PlayStation 3 outsold the Xbox 360 (NPD figures for the first three months of the year, through March 2008).