The_Liquid_Laser said:
This FY and next FY are going to be the most important for determining how well this prediction is doing. Switch total shipments for the FY ending March 2020 were 55.78m. This FY is going to be the peak and the year after will show us how much of a hold (or drop) Switch is getting after its peak. Once we see the next two years then it will be a lot more clear how the Switch is going to do. Optimistic case: High peak and strong hold. Maybe something like 30m this FY and 25m next FY. That would put Switch at essentially 111m at March 2022. Now assume around 30% drops after that and get approx. 17.5m, 12m, 8.5m and another 20-30m in the following years and you get 169m-179m. Basically in this scenario with a high peak and a strong hold it's pretty easy for Switch to take the top spot. Pessimistic case: Lower peak and a big drop. Let's say Switch ships 24m this FY and 15m next FY. This puts Switch at about 95m at March 2022. Assume 40% drops and get approx. 9m, 5m, and another 15-25m in the following years. That puts the total at 124m-134m. With a low peak this FY and a big drop next FY, then there is no way the Switch can take the top spot. If we get one of the two other cases, then it's going to be a close battle to the end. High peak, big drop: This is a very likely scenario. Something like 30m this FY and 20m next FY. This means COVID gave Switch a huge boost, but 20m at the end of March 2022 is still a solid number, since this is close to shipments from the March 2020 FY. Total would be 106m at that point, and then we'd have to carefully watch the legs, because it's going to be close. 25% drops would be close to 15m, 11m, 8m with another 20-30m after that. Total 160m-170m. On the other hand 40% drops would be more like 12m, 7m and then 15-25m after that which totals. 140m-150m. In this last case you can see that 25% drops put it just above the record while 40% drops put it just below the record. So in this situation it very much comes down to how well Switch can leg it out. Low peak, strong hold is not much diffferent. But if we get one of the first two scenarios, then the data will be pretty conclusive about whether or not Switch will break the record. |
Umm why are your post-Switch2 launch totals so crazy high for Switch? Your pessimistic number for Switch sales after the successor launches is 15-25 million??? Pessimistic should be like 5-7 million, not up to 25 million, and optimistic should be like 15 million tops, not up to 30 million.
I think your low peak, strong hold scenario is probably most correct, just because I don't think Nintendo is gonna make enough Switch's to get anywhere near 30 million, more like 25 million. Or maybe a better way to put it is low peak (ha I like how ~25 million is "low" in this context) and gradual drop. Unless they have vastly increased production and we just aren't aware of it, I mean they should be doing that but until I see some statement by them or until we see that they don't have massive holiday shortages I'm gonna assume they aren't producing 30 million systems this fiscal year. But if they've massively upped their manufacturing so that they are still healthily building up for a huge holiday quarter despite shipping tons of systems during the year then obviously they will go higher than 25 million.
Anyway, I think fiscal years of ~25, ~20, ~16, ~10 (leading up to Switch2 launch), and then 10 million post-Switch2 launch are reasonable. Let's see that puts it at 136+ million lifetime, which is very realistic. If they can actually put 30 million systems into stores this fiscal year then maybe they break 140 million.







