You’ve seen last week’s charts, now see last month’s PC sales charts. Courtesy of the NPD Group, we’ve got the twenty top-selling PC games in the US for the month of November.
Oh dear. Looks like an important member of the RE family has passed away. An ad running in the latest issue of Famitsu – after the jump, since it spoils – bears the bad news.
Sales of the Nintendo DSi on its home turf were way up this week after dipping into “just awesome enough” territory the week prior. Nintendo moved another 126K, according to Media Create.
Every year, film executives get together and nominate the best scripts they came across that didn’t make it to the big screen by the end of the year. Among 2008′s list of 250 screenplays? GTA: The Movie.
The PlayStation family didn’t have an ideal November, but Sony’s not letting an across-the-board decline bring it down. Nope, we’re only five words into the company’s NPD response before it throws it out there. “Momentum.”
When just one of your platforms does more than a half-billion dollars in revenue, we’d expect you to be pleased. Unsurprisingly, Nintendo seems to be, bragging about the 3.6 million systems it sold last month in the US.
The Xbox 360 had a solid, more spectacular November in the US than it did last year, which Microsoft is calling its “Biggest November Ever.” It took a few shots at its PlayStation competition while doing so.
What’s this? A Team Fortress 2 update?! Oh goodie! The official TF2 blog finally gets an update, foretelling of incoming changes to the multiplayer game, something Spies and Engineers should definitely take note of.
Gamasutra had a pleasant chat with Aspyr Software’s Justin Leingang in which the publisher/developer revealed some details about their new game Treasure Troves, which uses local wifi signals to generate in-game objects.