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The Last Stories

While Modern Warfare 3, FIFA Soccer 12 and Saints Row: The Third were all topping the PS3 and 360 sales charts in the final week before Christmas, in comparison, the five best selling games on the Wii were Just Dance 3, Mario & Sonic at the London 2012 Olympic Games, Zumba Fitness, Zumba Fitness 2 and The Legend of… actually no, the fifth spot went to Mario Kart Wii, while sixth, seventh and eighth went to Skyward Sword, an ABBA dancing game and “Now! That’s What I Call Music: Dance and Sing”. As a Nintendo fan who grew up with a SNES and N64, these sales figures are a little hard to digest, because while I’m all for the expansion of the videogames industry I don’t want it to come at the expense of core console games. And even though No More Heroes 2, Monster Hunter Tri and Sin and Punishment 2 have helped save thousands of AA batteries from dying in wasteful silence, they’ve been the exception rather than the rule. But then August came along and something unusual happened. After being disappointed time and time again by the “Japan-only” stigma that struck Captain Rainbow, Fatal Frame IV and Sandlot’s Zangeki no Reginleiv, Nintendo of Europe finally came good by localising Xenoblade Chronicles. Was this the act of a company trying to get back in touch with its core audience, or was Nintendo simply filling in a gap during the yearly summer drought? Read more…