Not exact matches
Super Mario Maker sold 56 percent of its shipment, which
means that Nintendo did a pretty good job at estimating
sales of the game — there's plenty of demand, and there is plenty of stock to meet the demand.
Playing alongside the new Quattroporte, refreshed GranTurismos, and an upcoming Maserati SUV with which it will share plenty, including the task of being the real
sales lumber, the mid-size Maserati Ghibli is
meant to power a steep
sales climb, aided by unprecedented marketing money (the brand's first - ever U.S. television commercial ran during the
Super Bowl) and a host of new U.S. dealers.
Choosing the GLE 63 S
means buying a car that's at odds with most others on
sale in the UK — it's large, brutally fast and uses more than its fair share of
super unleaded.
I just hope they don't pull the whole «No DLC» bullcrap that they did on Wii U. I
mean, yeah, the Wii U versions of CoD weren't gonna sell
super great regardless, but not having all the maps definitely put a LARGE dent in their potential
sales.
sales don't really
mean much though when it comes to nintendo systems, Wii made huge profits with only a handful of games (which is why it died pretty soon after, people still bought the system but after playing Mario Kart,
Super Smash and Mario Brother's Wii edition so many times that system got old fast) The Wii - U was a MUCH better system but didn't sell because people didn't want an upgrade to the Wii, they wanted something new and nintendo did a HORRIBLE job promoting the Wii - U, not to mention they gave up on the Wii - U so fast they didn't even give it a chance, a system won't sell if it doesn't have enough games.