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Bofferbrauer2 said:
Shadow1980 said:

I think I do. Let me check...

I have this, which also includes the N64, GC, and Wii U:

The Switch is still trailing the Wii by a considerable amount, but at the same time it's also far outpacing the N64, GC, and especially Wii U by a significant quantity. As home consoles go, it's Nintendo's second-biggest showing in the U.S. for the past five generations and is so far performing on par with the PS4 (and for Year 3 it's actually outpacing the PS4), which means it's only being clearly beaten by the PS2 & Wii. If it continues to experience at least 20% YoY growth on average for the remainder of the year and gets a big boost from Pokemon S&S, it ought to sell over 7 million units this year alone, far more than the 5.1M the PS4 sold in 2016. The last time a home console sold over 7M units in the U.S. in a single year was the 360 in 2011, and if the Switch does pass that milestone it will be only the sixth time on record a home console has done this (based on shipment data, the NES might have also accomplished this on two or three occasions). If I had to make a guess, the Switch will optimistically sell around 37.5M units, ±1.5M, which assumes 7M+ this year, only a modest 10% drop next year, a ~20% drop in 2021 and 2022, and the Switch's next-gen replacement coming no earlier than Q4 2023. Assuming my estimate of 35M the other day for the PS4 comes true, here's what the all-time Top 5 rankings in the U.S. could look like by time the Switch is discontinued:

PS2: 46.7M
360: 43.2M
Wii: 41.8M
Switch: 37.5M
PS4: 35M

Since I expect a high likelihood of the PS vs. Xbox race being much closer next generation, I don't expect either the PS5 or Scarlett to sell over 35M units individually in the U.S., though I do think they'll end up around 65M together.

Wow at those upcoming Wii December sales! But the rest of the year was already foreshadowing what to come: The baseline dropped a lot compared to the previous years, and it looks like Switch has a shot at surpassing the Wii in July and August, and most probably will surpass it in November.

And I would never have guessed that the N64 would have won the first holiday season against Switch and Wii...

Yeah most people don't realize just how insanely strong the N64 started out; the problem was it crashed and burned once the droughts kicked in, with most third party support having jumped ship, leaving it with an almost Wii U-esque level of software output.