Weekly PC Sales: World of Warcraft Dominates, Blizzard Games Account for Half of the Top 10

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Sales-tracking and marketing research group NPD has chimed in with the latest PC software sales in the United States, covering the week of August 3 to August 9, 2008.

As can be glimpsed below, the latest figures put Blizzard's ever-successful MMO World of Warcraft back at the top of the charts, with the Diablo Battle Chest continuing its chart presence while the Warcraft 3 Battle Chest pops up for the first time since early July.

All told, Blizzard-developed titles make up half of the week's best-selling software, with regulars from Maxis, Her Interactive and Infinity Ward representing the remainder.

  1. World Of Warcraft: Battle Chest / Blizzard / $32 (Average)
  2. The Sims 2 Double Deluxe / EA Maxis / $30 (Average)
  3. World Of Warcraft / Blizzard / $20 (Average)
  4. Nancy Drew: The Phantom Of Venice / Her Interactive / $20 (Average)
  5. Spore Creature Creator / EA Maxis / $10 (Average)
  6. Diablo Battle Chest / Blizzard / $33 (Average)
  7. Warcraft III Battle Chest / Blizzard / $33 (Average)
  8. World Of Warcraft: Burning Crusade Expansion Pack / Blizzard / $30 (Average)
  9. The Sims 2 IKEA Home Stuff Expansion Pack / EA Maxis / $20 (Average)
  10. Call Of Duty 4: Modern Warfare / Infinity Ward / $49 (Average)

Chris Faylor was previously a games journalist creating content at Shacknews.

From The Chatty
  • reply
    August 19, 2008 7:33 AM

    Once more I can't help but notice that most of the top 10 is made of very inexpensive games..

    • reply
      August 19, 2008 7:37 AM

      Two of which are Maxis.

      How did Nancy Drew get up there??

      • reply
        August 19, 2008 7:48 AM

        Nancy Drew has been up there for the past few weeks.

    • reply
      August 19, 2008 7:44 AM

      Most of them are quite old already and they're pretty much just box sets. Plus, World of WarCraft is a pay-per-month MMO.

      What I think this shows, is that quality games can continue to sell long after that "first couple of weeks hype" that a lot of people talk about now. Warcraft 3 is like 5 years old now, I doubt we'll ever see any of the new Command and Conquers do that.

    • reply
      August 19, 2008 7:59 AM

      That's right. On another note, CoD 4 (still a full-price product) is in the top ten since I first viewed this kind of charts. I wonder how many units they have sold by now.

    • reply
      August 19, 2008 8:12 AM

      I would not consider WoW inexpensive (subscription).

    • reply
      August 19, 2008 8:17 AM

      I wouldn't say 30 dollars is VERY inexpensive. Expansion pack at 20, spore's creature creator at 10, neither are a full game. Sure, WoW is 20 bucks, but that doesn't count for a subscription.

      I'll give you Nancy Drew.

      • reply
        August 19, 2008 9:51 AM

        I think Nancy Drews sell because of a lot of reasons. Price is definitely one of them, but primarily though, I think it is because their target audience is not the hardcore gamers.

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