Sentences with phrase «sell staggering numbers»

Just got the Switch this past weekend and am navigating through the wonder of Zelda... The console is great... and should sell staggering numbers... hopefully encouraging more third party support.

Not exact matches

Nevertheless, the move was a prescient one: 25 went on to sell a staggering 3.4 million copies in its first week — the largest number since Nielsen began tracking the figure in 1991.
Ford, GM and Ram sell such an obscene number of trucks that crunching the numbers leads to figures so staggering they're...
Nokia has never acknowledged they are into the tablet race until now though it was just a matter of time before it did, for it would have meant remaining shut out from a hot new emerging market the size of which is staggering and is measured in millions in the number of units sold.
The number of copies it was selling was staggering, but it resulted in an angry backlash from thousands of Canadian customers, who said they would no longer do business with Amazon.
The numbers are actually quite staggering: for the latest quarter, Amazon sold 143 e-books for every 100 hardcovers they sold.
In some cases those numbers are staggering, and it's easy to read them and ask yourself, how the heck is it even possible to sell that many books.
If that number doesn't stagger you, Capcom has reported that the game has sold out in Japan.
This is a staggering number of copies that was sold through physical locations, Xbox Live, PlayStation Network and PC and represents «sales in excess of $ 750 million.»
While 196,000 units sold is already a staggering record for a console that is essentially a throwback, the number could have been significantly larger had Nintendo met demands.
But it was Pollock's Number 19, 1948 that took home the top sale honors of the night, selling for the final price of $ 58.3 million, a staggering jump from its last auction price of $ 2.4 million in 1993.
-- Pollock, Number 19, 1948 Est. $ 25,000,000 — $ 35,000,000; SOLD $ 58,363,750 — Roy Lichtenstein, Woman with Flowered Hat Est. on request; SOLD $ 56,123,750 — Basquiat, Dustheads Est. $ 25,000,000 — $ 35,000,000; SOLD $ 48,843,750 — Clyfford Still, PH - 1 Est. $ 15,000,000 — $ 20,000,000, Unsold — de Kooning, Untitled XVII Est. $ 4,000,000 — $ 6,000,000; SOLD $ 9,755,750 — Basquiat, Furious Man Est. $ 1,000,000 — $ 1,500,000; SOLD $ 5,723,750 — Picasso, Composition (Figure féminine sur une plage) Est. $ 800,000 — $ 1,200,000; SOLD $ 1,443,750 — Miró, Femme, oiseaux Est. $ 200,000 — $ 300,000; Unsold — Cristina Iglesias, Díptico VI Est. $ 15,000 — $ 20,000; SOLD $ 20,000 — Javier Vallhonrat, Inner edge, the Possessed Space, 1991 Est. # 2,000 — # 3,000; SOLD # 10,000 + > Christie's Post-War and Contemporary Art department set a new benchmark for the art market, raising a staggering total of $ 638,615,900 (# 420,248,526 / $ 497,974,951) and setting 37 new records christies + Christie's Contemporary Evening Sale, Wednesday, May 15th, 2013 ao.....
This staggering number of naïve wannabes is a reflection of a collective mindset that regards selling real estate as an easy path to much more money than has been earned previously, if not outright riches due to the potential for insider trading in real estate.
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