WarioWare: Touched (DS) - Came out in the first year of the DS and less than a million were made. Still hard to find at used game stores.
Kirby Canvas Curse (DS) - See WarioWare
Dragon Quest IV-VI (DS): Each of these had a limited run, especially DQV which only got like 200,000 made outside Japan.
Henry Hatsworth (DS): Another great game with a limited run which hurt its sales. Never seen this game used in a store.
Retro Game Challenge (DS): If you want a textbook case of a game being under printed, its this. Virtually all of its 50,000 sales WAS the entire first printing. The publishers, XSeed, then blamed its low sales for the lack of a second printing or bringing its sequel, Game Center CX 2, to America. Why do so many developers blame the fans for their failures on the DS and Wii....
Dragon Ball Origins (DS): In all fairness, perhas this game should remain rare. It was like a weaker clone of Phantom HOurglass with VERY repetative dungeons and fighting. But still, its hard to come by.
Dragon Ball: Revenge of King Picollo (Wii): Similar to Dragon Ball Origins. Not the best game out there, but still will be rare over time because of such a small printing.
Valkaria Chronicles (PS3) - Enough were made...people just don't sell it. And for good reason.
Atelier Rorona (PS3) - To my knowledge, they made less than 500,000 copies of this outside Japan.
Little Kings Story (Wii) - Talk about a flop. The game had hype, but fell completely flat in sales. There's still plenty of store shelves, but I doubt it got a second print. Once those initial copies slowly sell, it'll be gone.
Zack and Wiki: The Quest for Barbaros' Treasure (Wii): Why do all the Wii and DS games get this treatment? This game actually had a good marketing capaign and plenty of stock, but was completely overlooked by the early Wii push. Like Canvas Curse and WarioWaqre on the DS, thisgame got overlooked for coming out in the first year. There's still copies on the store shelves, but it should get quite rare soon.
Metroid Prime Trilogy (Wii) - Only two printings of the game that sold about 700,000 copies. And few people sell the game back to stores.
Muramasa: The Demon Blade (Wii) - About 500,000 have sold worldwide and there's still some left on store shelves. But soon, it'll be quite rare.











