TOKYO – Nintendo Co. reported a 36 per cent drop in quarterly profit on Tuesday after lacklustre video game sales for the year-end holiday shopping season.
The Japanese manufacturer of Super Mario games and the Wii U game machine earned 29.1 billion yen ($241 million) profit for the October-December fiscal third quarter, down from 45.2 billion yen a year earlier.
The Kyoto-based company, which suffered a blow when its charismatic president Satoru Iwata died in July last year, kept its annual forecasts unchanged at a 35 billion yen ($290 million) profit on 570 billion yen ($4.7 billion) sales for the fiscal year through March.
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Quarterly sales slipped 18 per cent to 221.5 billion yen ($1.8 billion).
For the nine months from April through December, Nintendo said global sales of the Wii U reached 3.06 million units. It’s aiming to sell 3.4 million of the machines through March.
Its sales trailed those of rivals Sony’s PlayStation 4 console and Microsoft’s Xbox One. The results show Nintendo suffered during the holidays when game sales are usually strong. There is speculation in the gaming industry that Nintendo is readying a new console that will be shown later this year.
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Among the company’s Wii U game software that recorded strong sales were “Splatoon” and “Super Mario Maker.” It said “The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess HD” will be introduced and will likely contribute to sales growth.
The 3DS handheld machine fared better, with Nintendo selling 5.88 million during the nine months. The company projected 7.6 million in sales for the year through March. “Animal Crossing: Happy Home Designer” was a hit game for the hand-held platform, according to Nintendo.
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