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In what should come as little shock to you by now, Nintendo dominated the U.S. video game industry for another month. Pokemon led the software charts and the DS topped all hardware, followed by the Wii. Get the details...


Following an April in which software sales were slightly down, in May the video game industry in the U.S. bounced back nicely. Console software was up 31 percent to more than $274 million, and total video game industry sales soared 49 percent to $815.5 million. Year-to-date, video game sales have reached $5 billion, a 47 percent increase over last year's $3.4 billion. A record breaking year would almost seem guaranteed for 2007.


Console hardware was a real driver of growth in May as sales climbed 79 percent to $221.4 million. Overall in hardware, the Nintendo DS (at this point, not surprisingly) took top honors... again. Nintendo sold through 423K units during the month. This was followed by Wii, PSP, PS2, Xbox 360, and then PS3. Unfortunately, NPD could not provide a complete hardware sales breakdown as of press time, but directionally it is interesting to see the PSP outselling the PS2, 360 and PS3.


On the software side, Nintendo's Pokemon Diamond for the DS once again led all titles. The game sold an additional 331.2K units, bringing total sales of Pokemon Diamond and Pearl in the U.S. to well over 2 million thus far. Diamond and Pearl have already sold over 5 million copies in Japan, and the entire Pokemon franchise has sold over 155 million.


Here's the complete top ten list (ranked by units), as provided by NPD.



Pokemon Diamond—DS—Nintendo


Mario Party 8—Wii—Nintendo


Spider-Man 3—PS2—Activision


Pokemon Pearl—DS—Nintendo


Wii Play w/remote—Wii—Nintendo


Forza Motorsport 2—Xbox 360—Microsoft


Guitar Hero II w/guitar—Xbox 360—Activision


Spider-Man 3—Xbox 360—Activision


Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars—Xbox 360—Electronic Arts


Guitar Hero II w/guitar—PS2—Activision


Note: NPD industry analyst Anita Frazier was not available for comment on this month's data.




People are difficult to govern because they have too much knowledge.

When there are more laws, there are more criminals.

- Lao Tzu