Why You Can't Find a Wii for Christmas 450
Nintendo is making Wii consoles at a record pace, some 1.8 million a month. Last week they sold 350,000 units. Yes, just last week. And yet, still, it's going to be almost impossible to find a Wii in a store this Christmas. Wired reports that the problem actually began back in August. Summer being the traditional 'dry' season in gaming usually leads to hardware surpluses, but not with Nintendo's console. The result is a holiday season that Nintendo essentially couldn't prepare for. "Demand for Wii is so high, says analyst Michael Pachter, because of all the different types of consumers competing for the units ... it's not just kids who crave Wii. [It's] an especially big hit at retirement homes ... Hard-core gamers, who initially spurned the Wii's lower graphic power compared to the Xbox and PlayStation 3, have changed their tune on the console, thanks to brilliant software like the first-person shooter Metroid Prime 3. And eBay scalpers? They really want Wii." In fact, the only reliable way to get your hands on a Wii is to go that most dubious of routes. Ebay Wii sales are very brisk indeed this week.
The math? (Score:2, Insightful)
350,000 sold x 4 (weeks per month) = 1.4million sold per month
They make 1.8 million a month.
If they're making more than they're selling, why is it so hard to find a console?
Re:The math? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The math? (Score:5, Informative)
From another article link:
In fact:
GUARENTEED WAY... NOT EBAY TO GET ONE (Score:5, Informative)
This is the only way I know of. I hope this helps.
By the way, the Nintendo World store in Manhattan is in Rockefeller Center.
Re:GUARENTEED WAY... NOT EBAY TO GET ONE (Score:5, Informative)
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The top three days seem to be:
1) Day after Christmas (all the sales, money and gift cards)
2) Black Friday
3) Christmas Eve
#3 usually comes in second place, with #1 or #3 coming in first, and the other second, depending on the store.
Re:The math? (Score:5, Informative)
Anecdote isn't evidence, and your friends in retail don't know what they are talking about.
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from my limited experience in retail (3 years, then i ran away to college), the day after thanksgiving is about the worst, if not THE worst day to work. the customers don't necessarily spend more, but they expect these fabulous deals and pitch a fit if they don't find them, (and often leave, if you can't deliver), and are generally annoying all day long.
the weekend before Xmas is the day that things aren't on sale, c
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The red-to-black has always been the theory explaining why its called Black Friday. I don't think I've ever heard anyone not say before. Yes, anectode I know, but when every news channel in every city I've ever been in explains it the same way... well.
Anyway like I said, if you're not spending, you're not shopping. You're walking around. My wife and I do this alot (not this time of year though); we often walk thro
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Possibly the most dubious backformation (i.e. "made up shit") I've ever heard. It's called Black Friday because it's a bad day to be in the trenches in retail.
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Please, please, please: learn to be wary of anecdotal reasoning.
Re:The math? (Score:5, Funny)
But my friend, the bikini store owner, says....
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The Wii isn't sold in every type of store in existence (ex: grocery, automotive), and thus, using a general statistic that covers every store is at least as invalid. The people who I talked to (and considered) at least worked at stores that would sell video game consoles.
So, we have right demographic, and judgments based on numbers, vs. right demographic offset by wrong demographic, based on numbers.
Both conclusions have their flawed points. In
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Typically a trend like that should follow with a type of store, rather than a specific store.
Ex: The busies day of the year for car-parts stores will be different than clothing retailers, which will differ from electronics stores, which will differ from food stores, etc. etc. etc.
My coworker's chain was a general department store (I think - he's not here today, so I can't ask him).
Regardless, it's not pointless because: Not all types of store
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Check your units of measure. They're making 1.4 million a month, but they sold 350K last week.
Assuming that the two figures are representative, then you have a point. Otherwise, you're comparing apples and oranges (or, more to the point, the author handing you apples and oranges, and either not realizing it or not caring...).
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They normally average 500k+ per month in the US. But the 1.8m per month is split between the US, UK/Europe and Japan. So those three together add up to the 1.8m.
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Yes, the worst ten years of my life were the four years I spent in Ottawa. (apologies to Mark Twain)
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Dear the rest of the world... (Score:5, Funny)
Trust me, I'll be able to find a Wii come Christmas Morning. It'll be exactly where I put it a year ago.
Re:Dear the rest of the world... (Score:5, Funny)
Smug Humor (Re:Dear the rest of the world...) (Score:5, Funny)
Try this on for size :)
I have THREE PS3s. [youtube.com]Good stuff...
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Well.. I don't, but at least I have cake.
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Re:Dear the rest of the world... (Score:5, Funny)
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Try looking here. [google.com]
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Considering the demand on the Wii and the resulting rise in value... Don't count on it.
It's really small. (Score:5, Funny)
If it becomes too hard to find, just go to a friend's house and take his.
Leaving the money where the Wii was, is regarded as a nice touch.
Bundle packs (Score:3, Interesting)
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Thats pretty reasonable. Your likely to want the extra controller and certainly you will want some games. The packages last year seemed a lot less desirable (maybe because there weren't as many good games out for the Wii)
Re:Bundle packs (Score:4, Informative)
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honestly, they are not THAT hard to get a hold of. A few tips:
1) Walk into your local EB/GameStop/bestbuy/whatever and ask when they expect to get the next shipment (day and time), if you don't know just ask when their weekly shipments come in. Be there around noon (generally) and ask if they have received the shipme
Hype (Score:3, Interesting)
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Correct, except for the part about the Wii being "still readily available". The Wii is in short supply now, as it has been for the entire past year.
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Uh, no. It's sold out right now. They actually sold 1 million units Thanksgiving week. They're 'advertising' something you cannot realistically go buy right now.
meh (Score:2)
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People are buying them out so they are obviously available...you just have to be there before other people to get it:-) I mean...you wouldn't want your stuff in their house, would you?
"Someone else would have bought our stuff...our stuff, in their house!" -Gallagher
Sometimes it isn't that hard... (Score:4, Informative)
Last year, they sold out before the store opens (because of more people lining up overnight than the store had). Then it changed early in the new year where it sold out in about 20 minutes. During the summer, it easily took a day to sell out, and now, about a week. (Still brisker than a PS3.)
At least here (Vancouver, BC), if you really wanted one, you can get one if you try. No fancy lining up, just check a bunch of stores during the week. I spot them quite easily - just check all the usual stores over the course of a week. You don't have to check every store daily - just once a week, and you're bound to run into one with one in stock within a week or two. From observations, companies like Best Buy and other big electronic chains typically get big shipments (~30/week or so per store), than game stores like EBGames (maybe 3 a week). Wal-Mart tends to get a few as well. Generalize to other big stores.
Of course, with Christmas approaching, I expect the sellout time to be around a day again, so if you have an electronics store (Best Buy, whatever) along your commute, it may help to stop by. If you ask nicely, they may even tell you when the shipments normally come in, so you can plan to visit that day, the day before (stuff occasionally arrives early), and the next business day (in case it's late). Heck, most stores post signs nowadays, so you don't have to ask, or offer clues (e.g., bundles) that they're in stock.
Yeah... (Score:2, Informative)
I'm glad I stood in line at launch too (Score:2, Funny)
I remember feeling kind of silly waiting in line for a Wii. "There will be lots more" I was thinking... but I got mine on launch and then the demand only increased. My older brother wanted to get one for his family for Christmas, and he spent the next month trying to acquire one, even missing work on several occasions to do it.
The same people saying the demand for the Wii is imaginary are most likely the same people that called the Wii a fad. Aren't fads supposed to fade out? or am I missing something her
HOW TO FIND A WII IN THE US (Score:5, Informative)
Check the weekly ads for Target and Best Buy on their respective websites on Saturday night/Sunday Morning. If there's a Wii in the Best Buy ad, go there immediately (sunday morning), they'll be there (ask if they're not on shelves, they may have not been stocked yet). If it's in the target ad, go to the store and ask the person working in electronics when they usually get their shipments in (day of the week). You should be good to get one if you get there before 10am that day.
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Also, I had five Wiimotes and two nunchucks b
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They've been easy to find all year, if you shop smart. Granted, units might be a bit harder to come by this month, as demand spikes again...
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Unfortunately the page appears to be broken but if someone would like me to code a replacement I could probably do that for a reasonable fee (I mean, I already have one) and have it email you instead.
If
No Mom, It's MY Wii (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No Mom, It's MY Wii (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:No Mom, It's MY Wii (Score:4, Funny)
Well then she'd better go and have one then - it's not good for the bladder holding it in like that.
Sorry, I was waiting for an "I'd like a Wii" statement...
(Dude left himself wide open, even talked about his mom wanting a Wii, and best you got is that she had to go to the toilet? I woulda been all like "watersports" and such... You know, his mom doesn't have wii she needs to get rid of, she wants it... Such a waste...)
Shortage should not affect most slashdotters (Score:4, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Mine was just delivered... (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, it was over $500 on Amazon Resellers this morning.
Same for DDR and Guitar Hero, which are apparently incredibly rare games for no apparent reason that I can see. One minute DDR was $168, the next it was $69.99. What's amusing is seeing how fast the Amazon resellers react and adjust their prices.
Bill
Not Indicative (Score:4, Insightful)
350 000 sold last week
Now, think about that, if every week they sold 350 000, and they only made 150 000, how did they find the extra 200 000.
Two answers- either they have a stockpile (not likely considering stores have been empty for almsot a year) - OR - they DIDN'T sell 350 000 units in the previous weeks.
Now, could we in future post articles which aren't based on freak statistics and make out those results are normal.
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Re:Not Indicative (Score:5, Insightful)
Or maybe, just maybe, Nintendo knows November is a great month in North-America compared to Europe or Japan, and they decided to ship a little more to the US and a little less everywhere else for that month. I think the US is about the only (big) country to massively buy and give gifts in November, most of the world waits till December.
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Two answers- either they have a stockpile (not likely considering stores have been empty for almsot a year) - OR - they DIDN'T sell 350 000 units in the previous weeks.
They did. At least, a lot of stores did. We recently bought the last Wii available for sale at the local Gamestop just before they were ordered from on high to hold them back so there'd be a few on sale for Black Friday. They only had maybe two more in the store that they could hold anyway, so maybe "stockpiling" is a little overstated.
Regret with Mario and Smash Bros.? (Score:2)
How I got one (Score:4, Interesting)
My tactic was pretty simple: Ask all of the stores in my area what day of the week they typically get deliveries on. Then call each store on its standard delivery day (and the day after, if the shipment hadn't been unpacked when I called), asking if they had a Wii. It paid off in several months.
I was probably also lucky that I wasn't doing this during the holiday season, otherwise the Wiis probably would have been all snapped up before I got there. But still, my approach may be worth a shot.
P.S. It really is a lot of fun, especially for a casual gamer like me.
Amazon.de or Amazon.fr (Score:3, Informative)
Find a Wii using Target Product Lookup (Score:2, Informative)
This method is not guaranteed, but it will help a lot. It helps best if you live in a large urban area with multiple stores around.
If you want a Wii... (Score:2)
Got mine. (Score:2)
Remember the storeis 4 months ago? (Score:5, Insightful)
I remember a Slasdot story about 4 months ago that basically said the Wii had peaked, that all the non-gamers that wanted one had bought it already, and it was sitting unused, while the gamers did not want one.
What crap.
Sony etc. are still caught in the "better chip/video, at any cost" model. Nintendo got it right, the video is more than good enough at the low end. It will take another revolution in video quality to make the best chips worth it again. For now, better games and better controllers are where it is at.
Why you can't find one NOW (Score:5, Insightful)
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I was hoping to find one or two to sell on eBay myself. But I have family and friends that I would find them for first since I know other people looking. I've been telling people to buy a bundle if they see one in a store - even the $700 Walmart bundle. At least that way they get some of the things they would buy eventually anyways and they're not paying any inflated pric
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Re:eBay Effect (Score:5, Informative)
That's possible, but not necessarily true. The retailer I worked at would have forbidden that. If high demand items were in low supply, we weren't allowed to buy them. I know the same was also true for the EB that was down the street. Those stores didn't want that reputation.
Re:eBay Effect (Score:5, Funny)
You're right! Your anecdotal evidence totally trumps that other guy's anecdotal evidence!
Go you!
Re:It's all about over-hype and sheeple (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It's all about over-hype and sheeple (Score:5, Funny)
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They're producing 1.8 million units a month. That is not inducing an artifical shortage. (Not to mention, there's absolutely no way they could sustain the hype for over a year. People do get tired of waiting.
Re:It's all about over-hype and sheeple (Score:5, Insightful)
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There is virtually no incentive to deliberately short the supply. Every day a person who wants a Wii can't find one is another day they might break down and buy something else. The more consoles you can get into the homes the more likely you are to attract better games and make more money. They want to sell you that c
Re:It's all about over-hype and sheeple (Score:5, Interesting)
Besides, do you really think Nintendo was equipped to predict the Wii's popularity in new markets, such as retirement homes? I simply don't see any way that demand hasn't far exceeded Nintendo's expectations.
An artificial shortage would only help Nintendo if it enabled them to sell more consoles in the long run or if it enabled them to jack up prices. They obviously aren't going to increase the price, so how might an artificial shortage still lead to increased sales in the long run? Earlier in the year, it would have been reasonable to say that they wanted to wait until there were some solid games out, but with the hype about Super Mario Galaxy, it seems pretty clear that that time is over. So, if Nintendo is capable of making significant production increases, why wait?
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Wow, that's exactly what I said last year. Then around April I said fuck it and bought one on eBay for $330.
Maybe Christmas 2008...
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Why click through to stories about video games only to spend time typing long messages to tell people they're wasting their lives? Does that make your life complete in some way? Hypocrite.
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Yeah, that's what I said to myself LAST year. Maybe it'll work out better for us this time.
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Come on... I'm not buying that line for a minute. Nintendo sold something like 20 million GameCubes over five years. Interest was simply never all that high. Now it's one thing to believe in your products, but another to put capital on the line for expensive production capacity assuming that your new system will sell 15 million in *one* year after your last system sold 20 million in five years. There's no way that Nintendo, always a conservative comp
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at the moment I'm having great fun buying up ultra-cheap Gamecube games from all the trade-ins the Wii frenzy has generated.
I'm having great fun buying up ultra-cheap Gamecube games -- to play on my Wii. Until recently, the Wii wasn't any good for much but replaying my older generation games. I picked up Mario Galaxy on Sunday and was very, very impressed with the title. The graphics look amazing (even at 61 inches) and the game itself is fantastic -- after a full year of wondering what I was going to do with the thing, I'm finally happy with my Wii.
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It prints money! (Score:2)
Anyhow there's no point in going beyond material possesions if it's only temporarily. If you're so enlightened, why don't you just stick with your GameCube? There's still plenty of fun games for it and then you w
read much? (Score:2)
It isn't like you can just produce twice as many units by spendi
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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And rightly so. Microsoft and Sony are not known for having great 1st party titles and Nintendo is. On the other hand, take a look at the 3rd party titles, and you'll find there actually are good games in that basket for MS and Sony (including some cross platform). So Nintendo provides you with the hardware AND the titles and MS/Sony are just looking to license others to develop on their hardware.
What
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"are not known for having" != "don't have"
Sony certainly has a wide variety of well-respected first- and second-party franchises; the fact that many people don't realize that Sony is responsible for them is irrelevant in terms of whether or not Sony is a good game-maker. As for Microsoft, it doesn't have many first-party games worth noting, but it does have XBox Live, which is just as important to modern console gaming in it
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I did forget about Gran Turismo. But my point is Sony's been in the game industry for about 12 years now, but they've only started making much of a name for themselves in game development in the last 4 years or so. The PS3 not having much of interest doesn't help that out there either.
That's a problem with second-party developers in general. Nintendo's
Re:It's all about over-hype and sheeple (Score:5, Insightful)
As for worrying about Nintendo's ability to keep producing, well, I wouldn't. I've had some issues with a few of the more recent Zelda games (Mask, Waker and Hourglass all had a horrifying amount of repetition) their other franchises are still getting better and better, in my estimation.
You can use the word 'rehash' but I think that's pretty unfair. What does it even mean? I always see it used in regards to things like the Mario series, which maintains a cast of characters and a tone, but each game brings something new to the table. People use the derogatoty word 'rehash' to describe this, whereas the same people have no such term for, say, the Halo series, where the gameplay of all three is nearly identical.
I realize that there's probably not a single company in the world that reuses IP as much as Nintendo, but I can't help but think "bullshit" when I see or hear somebody comment that they don't want to play another game with Mario in it. Does that specific set of polygons and textures actually make the gameplay less fun for some people? I might as well say that I'm tired of playing games with AK-47's. Or, if you want to stick to the playable characters, soldiers.
Two paragraph rant that hinges on a single word in original post: over.
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No. I just think Nintendo have done far more to make fun interesting games than Microsoft or Sony have.
:-)
Plus I've never bought a music CD protected by a Nintendo rootkit or stayed up into the small hours reinstalling Nintendo Windows XP on a relative's PC because of viruses and spyware.
Nintendo does some things well but they aren't' the "saviors of gaming". Sony and Microsoft have contributed as well. Without MS pushing live, online console play may still be a minute market. Without Sony laying the sales smackdown for two generations Nintendo may still be the monopolistic nanny corp it was back in it's hey day. Without MS pushing online content we may not have the PSN store or the wii shopping. Each of the three have made contributions.
As well Nintendo DRMs all it's games and their VC it
Re:It's all about over-hype and sheeple (Score:5, Insightful)
And yeah, telling developers that they could only release X number of titles per year was such an awful thing, because then it forced them to at least *try* to make a quality product, rather than assigning a single programmer the task of creating a video game -- and giving him a couple weeks to do it before it shipped. (ET anyone?)
As for censorship, the only 2 titles I know of that Nintendo actively censored were Mortal Kombat and Wolfenstein 3D. In the NES era there were pictures of Hitler's exploding head, implied sex, and plenty of other stuff. By the end of the SNES era, the blood was right back in MK2. And honestly I can't fault Nintendo for trying to avoid controversy with parents/religious groups because we all know how much worse those people are than some idiot gamers whining that they can't see blood or nazi symbols.
Their tactics were definitely heavy-handed, but you failed to mention the *one* thing that they really should be called on, and that was their dealing with retailers. They did everything they could to keep competitors products off the shelves.
And give an example of Nintendo being "bad" now...? Yeah, they shut down some pirate sites. That doesn't seem to bad to me. Yeah, they did go after some flash cart makers, and while that definitely sucks, the flash carts were primarily being sold as a piracy tool (spare me the homebrew argument, I know it all and that's why I think it sucks that they were shut down) so I can't really fault them for that.
Here's what Nintendo hasn't done: they haven't paid off developers for exclusives. They haven't sold consoles at a loss to try to buy their way into a new market. They haven't completely sold out and commercialized every aspect of my favorite hobby. They didn't help EA become the behemoth it is by helping them sell millions of cheap disc-based copies of Madden every year to idiot frat boys. They also haven't ever insulted me by saying that I should be willing to go take a second job to afford their game console, or reneged on a "$1200 per PS3 in the wild" deal made by one of their top execs. They've never released misleading hardware specifications (60 million! polygons per second! (unlit, untextured, single-pixel triangles on a single triangle strip)) or reported consoles/games shipped rather than sold.
So yeah, I'll defend them as one of the good guys. I can overlook some poor decisions in the 90s and a couple anticompetitive practices from the 80s. Besides, Sony is the poor decision maker lately, and Microsoft has a whole history of anticompetitive practices that continue today.
--Jeremy