Capcom CFO tells Reuters summit that latest survival
horror shooter was just 30,000 units from going quintuple-platinum at
the end of April.
Capcom ended its 2009 fiscal year with a bang in March,
seeing total revenues near $1 billion as early-year releases Resident
Evil 5 and Street Fighter IV compensated for the publisher's weak
holiday-quarter lineup. Capcom's zombie-infused shooter paid particular
dividends, with RE5 seeing an initial global shipment to retailers of 4 million units.
As part of the Reuters Global Technology Summit
in Tokyo, Japan, last week, Capcom's chief financial officer, Kazuhiko
Abe, provided an update on RE5 sales, saying that the survival horror
game sold 4.4 million units globally by the end of March. That same
month, US game industry sales were down 17 percent year-over-year as RE5 led software with a combined 1.52 million units across the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 editions of the game.
Abe also indicated that RE5 is quickly approaching the
5-million-unit-sold mark--if it hasn't already achieved the milestone.
"We are still enjoying strong demand, very strong demand, that is," the
executive said. "In the single month of April, sales came to as many as
570,000 units." Combined with 4.4 million units already sold through
March, RE5 would have needed to sell a mere 30,000 units in May to
surpass the next platinum-level milestone.
Abe further noted that RE5 sales are now expected to exceed 1 million
units during Capcom's current fiscal year, which runs from April 1,
2009 to March 31, 2010. The PC edition of the game is expect to launch
later this year. Earlier this month, the publisher forecast fiscal-year
sales of ¥95 billion ($961.3 million), with operating income projected
to rise to ¥15.5 billion ($156.9 million).
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