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PSP – 23,588
PS3 – 18,951
Wii – 18,818
DSi LL – 10,737
DSi – 8,219

Xbox 360 – 3,258
DS Lite – 1,743
PS2 – 1,316
PSP go – 1,026

For comparison’s sake, here are the numbers from last week.

PSP – 25,054
PS3 – 20,987
Wii – 20,476
DSi LL – 16,267
DSi – 10,324

Xbox 360 – 3,546
DS Lite – 2,961
PS2 – 1,463
PSP go – 1,232


Super Mario Galaxy 2 (Wii) – 9.5
Arc Rise Fantasia (Wii) – 7.5
Dragon Ball: Origins 2 (DS) – 8.0
Tiger Woods PGA Tour 11 (Wii) – 9.0
Green Day: Rock Band (Wii) – 8.0
Mega Man Zero Collection (DS) – 9.0
River City Soccer Hooligans (DS) – 7.0
Blue Dragon: Awakened Shadow (DS) – 7.5
Tetris Party Deluxe (DS) – 8.5
Iron Man 2 (Wii) – 4.0
Iron Man 2 (DS) – 6.5


Thanks to Ross M for the tip!


LONDON & SAN FRANCISCO (10th June, 2010) – SEGA® Europe Ltd. and SEGA® of America, Inc. today announced that Conduit 2™, the latest collaboration with High Voltage Software, will support Wii MotionPlus™ enabling precision control and better tracking. The Conduit series is famed for its detailed control system allowing players to customise and configure their controls, including look sensitivity, turning speed, the dead zone and much more. Conduit 2 will use Wii MotionPlus to create the most responsive control system ever, as well as improved edge tracking and transitions to pointer control.

“Wii MotionPlus is something that the fans have been asking for since it was announced – we looked at it for the original game, took a look at its implementation in other titles, and ultimately felt that we could add to the experience in Conduit 2 by supporting it.” explains Eric Nofsinger, Chief Creative Officer of High Voltage Software.“It’s by no means required – gamers will have a great experience without it – but it does offer a level of extra control and adds value to those with the accessory.”

Conduit 2 will be playable at SEGA’s booth (#2023) at this year’s Electronic Entertainment Expo and will be released exclusively for the Wii™ system from Nintendo in Fall 2010.


“I think it is because Japanese RPGs were really never all that popular in the west to begin with. I think the best way of interpreting things is that they aren’t getting less popular; they weren’t very popular from the start.” – Shinji Mikami

Personally, it seems like there has always been a good chunk of gaming fans who’ve always enjoyed playing Japanese games in that genre. And I know of at least one RPG franchise that has been pretty popular for as long as I can remember…Final Fantasy!

Thanks to Robert for the tip!

Source


Atlus’ E3 2010 lineup

Posted on 15 years ago by (@NE_Brian) in DS, News | 0 comments

Trine 2
Rock of Ages
Etrian Odyssey III: The Drowned City
Knights in the Nightmare

In addition to the games above, it is possible that Atlus will be bringing other titles to the show.

Source


– Drums, lead/bass guitar, keyboards, lead vocals, two harmony vocals
– 83 new songs
– New Pro mode: Uses all 25 keys, stream shifts left and right to cover the right keys
– Keyboard can be connected to a computer as a MIDI keyboard
– Two advanced guitar controllers make use of the Pro mode
– One guitar is a fully-sized and functional Fender guitar
– Better animations, polished gameplay
– Participants can drop in/out
– Can change instruments and difficulty without stopping songs
– More approachable song menu

“With the introduction of keyboards, we get to bring a ton of amazing new music onto the platform, which will help feed the appetite for music for years to come.” – Alex Rigopulos, CEO of game studio Harmonix

“it’s hard to pick a favorite, but for The Doors to be making an appearance on Rock Band finally with their classic Break On Through, I love that one. And Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody is endlessly fun.” – Alex Rigopulos, CEO of game studio Harmonix

“Our ambition for Rock Band 3 was really to re-energize and reinvigorate the (music game) category and advance it and move it forward.” – Alex Rigopulos, CEO of game studio Harmonix

Source 1, Source 2


Developed by Yuji Naka and PROPE, Ivy the Kiwi? promises to live up to its pedigree this Autumn

Thursday 10th June 2010: Rising Star Games is delighted to announce that it will publish Sonic creator Yuji Naka’s ‘Ivy the Kiwi?’ on Nintendo formats.

Ivy the Kiwi? follows the storybook adventures of a lonely baby bird as she traverses beautiful 2-D landscapes and challenging obstacles in search of her mother. Players guide Ivy through her daunting journey utilising a unique control scheme: vines created and controlled by the player who aims to collect feathers to boost his score.



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