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Nintendo reports jump in first-quarter profit on hit video game console Wii Print E-mail
Written by Yuri Kageyama, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS   
Saturday, 02 August 2008
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A seventh-grader at Tokyo Joshi Gakuen all-girl junior high school plays a game on a Nintendo DS console during an English class in Tokyo, Thursday, June 26, 2008 as the portable video game machine is used as a key teaching tool at the school. Nintendo Co. said Wednesday, July 30, 2008 its profit for the first fiscal quarter rose 34 percent from a year ago as sales of its hit Wii video game consoles shot up. THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/Katsumi Kasahara

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TOKYO - Nintendo Co.'s profit for the fiscal first quarter surged 34 per cent as sales of its hit Wii console shot up, underlining the success of the video game unit in attracting novice players.

The Japanese manufacturer of Super Mario and Pokemon video games reported Wednesday a profit of 107.27 billion yen (US$996 million) from April through June, up from 80.25 billion yen in the same period last year.

The big factor behind the stellar performance was the Wii and its game software, including the "Wii Fit," which has drawn the health-conscious to doing simple exercises like yoga and aerobics with a video game.

Nintendo sold 5.2 million Wii machines worldwide during the quarter - 1.7 million than for the same period last year. It also sold 3.4 million "Wii Fit" games and 6.4 million "Mario Kart Wii" games.

Quarterly sales surged 24 per cent to 423.38 billion yen ($3.9 billion), according to Kyoto-based Nintendo.

Nintendo has now sold a cumulative 29.6 million Wii machines worldwide since its arrival in late 2006.

The Wii, with its trademark wand-like remote controller, has scored success against the PlayStation 3 from Japanese rival Sony Corp., which went on sale about the same time, as well as against the Xbox 360 from Microsoft Corp.

At the latest count, worldwide PS3 sales lagged at fewer than half of the Wii at 14.4 million. More than 19 million Xbox 360 consoles have been sold so far worldwide, according to Microsoft.

On Tuesday, Sony said its April-June profit plunged to 34.98 billion yen ($326.9 million) - about half that recorded a year ago - as a strong yen, the absence of "Spider-Man 3" revenue and faltering cell phone operations battered earnings.

Nintendo shrugged off an estimated 26.3 billion yen ($246 million) erosion in its quarterly sales from a strengthening yen, which gained about 15 per cent against the dollar from last year. Solid Wii sales were enough to offset the losses from an unfavourable exchange rate, Nintendo said.

Nintendo is planning to sell 25 million Wii consoles and 28 million of its handheld DS machines for the fiscal year through March 2009. More broadly, it says it wants to make its products a "must-have" for every individual, not just every home.

Unlike old-style games that require players to push a complex combination of buttons, Wii comes with an easy-to-use remote to swing around like a tennis racket or fishing pole. The machine has proven appealing to relative newcomers to gaming, including the elderly and women.

Less robust were sales of the Nintendo DS handheld machines, especially in Japan, the company said.

DS sales for the quarter dipped by 40,000 to 6.94 million machines. Worldwide DS sales now total 77.54 million, according to Nintendo.

Nintendo kept its profit forecast for the fiscal year through March 2009 at 325 billion yen ($3 billion), up 26 per cent from the record profit racked up the previous financial year. Its sales outlook was steady at 1.8 trillion yen ($16.8 billion) sales, up 7.6 per cent from the previous year.

Nintendo shares gained 3.6 per cent to 57,600 yen ($538) in Tokyo before the earnings were announced.
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