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LOS ANGELES - US sales of video games, devices and accessories rose 33 per cent to US$1.1 billion in March, propelled by sales of new video game consoles like the popular Wii from Nintendo, market research firm NPD said on Thursday.
The Wii was again the No. 1 current-generation video game console, selling 259,000 units. Its US$250 console uses a motion-sensitive controller that has been popular with mainstream gamers as well as new audiences like females, senior citizens and very young children.
Microsoft's Xbox 360 US unit sales were 199,000 in March and outpaced Sony's PlayStation 3 unit sales of 130,000. The high-end versions of those machines sell for US$400 and US$600, respectively.
Sony's last-generation PlayStation 2 continued to see strong sales with consumers picking up 280,000 units. The PS2, which now sells for US$130, was the leading console in the last generation with lifetime unit sales of 38 million in the United States.
Console dollar sales nearly doubled in March to hit US$257 million.
In the hand-held category, sales of the Nintendo DS hit 508,000 in March, ahead of Sony's PlayStation Portable, or PSP, with 180,000. Portable game hardware sales rose by about one-third to US$114 million.
Overall game sales were up 15 per cent to US$574 million.
Sony's "God of War II" for the PS2 topped the game charts with 833,000 units sold, followed by "Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Advanced Warfighter" from UbiSoft and Activision's "Guitar Hero II," each for the Xbox 360.
Video game sales have been on the rebound following last year's change to new console technology.
Overall video game related sales rose 54 per cent in the first three months of 2007, to US$3.3 billion, NPD said.
- REUTERS