Feburary's 20 Best-Selling PC Games Listed

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Following up on its weekly sales charts, marketing research group NPD has compiled a list of the 20 best-selling PC games at United States retailers during February.

While the chart sees the debut of Dawn of War II and F.E.A.R. 2, both of which were released during February, most of the listed games haven't changed from January.

  1. World Of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King / Blizzard / $38 (Average)
  2. The Sims 2 Double Deluxe / EA Maxis / $19 (Average)
  3. Warhammer 40K: Dawn of War II / Relic / $49 (Average)
  4. World Of Warcraft: Battle Chest / Blizzard / $37 (Average)
  5. F.E.A.R. 2: Project Origin / Monolith / $50 (Average)
  6. Spore / EA Maxis / $45 (Average)
  7. World Of Warcraft / Blizzard / $18 (Average)
  8. The Sims 2 Apartment Life Exp. Pack / EA Maxis / $20 (Average)
  9. Fallout 3 / Bethesda / $47 (Average)
  10. World Of Warcraft: Burning Crusade Expansion Pack / Blizzard / $28 (Average)
  11. Call Of Duty: World At War / Treyarch / $46 (Average)
  12. Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3 / EA LA / $30 (Average)
  13. Left 4 Dead / Valve / $46 (Average)
  14. The Sims 2 Deluxe / EA Maxis / $3 (Averge)
  15. Civilization IV / Firaxis / $21 (Average)
  16. The Sims 2 Mansion & Garden Stuff Exp. / EA Maxis / $18 (Average)
  17. StarCraft Battle Chest / Blizzard / $20 (Average)
  18. Spore Creepy & Cute Parts Pack / EA Maxis / $18 (Average)
  19. Diablo Battle Chest / Blizzard / $34 (Average)
  20. The Sims 2 Pets Exp. / EA Maxis / $19 (Average)

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

From The Chatty
  • reply
    March 12, 2009 10:23 AM

    i gotta know where all these people are that keep buying spore :(

    • reply
      March 12, 2009 10:25 AM

      What about all the people still buying The Sims 2? The games is years old, who's still buying the game that didn't get a copy yet?

      • reply
        March 12, 2009 11:11 AM

        bestbuy has a ~2 foot section of their pc game shelf just for the sims(2).

    • reply
      March 12, 2009 10:43 AM

      The single greatest path to failure in software development is assuming user thinks like you do.

      • reply
        March 12, 2009 10:47 AM

        More to the point: The people who think like us and play games like us tend to buy games immediately. That's why most games don't stay on this list more than a month. Anything that lasts longer than three months tends to have an extensive word-of-mouth campaign running.

        In short, these are the people who don't self-identify as gamers. They outnumber us, and I applaud studios that can successfully include them in our circle instead of treating them as out of bounds and unobtainable.

        • reply
          March 12, 2009 10:54 AM

          For the most part, the games on this list are the ones you can find in Walmart, Target, OfficeMax, etc.

          These stores look at sales data more than anything and will stock their shelves with other titles from the same publisher because they have been successful in the past. I know Spore is there sitting next to a dozen other Sim titles that everyone has already. Makes it very attractive to buy.

          • reply
            March 12, 2009 11:12 AM

            Yep. Distribution and Retail partnerships are key.

          • reply
            March 12, 2009 12:30 PM

            I find it difficult to assume that "everyone has" a long line of existing EA/Maxis products without continuing to follow that chain of logic to a final conclusion: that someone involved in that series of products figured out what caused "everyone" to keep coming back for more.

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