By Pei Li
HONG KONG (Reuters) – Nintendo Co Ltd has shipped 1 million Switch consoles in China since it launched the device in the world’s largest video games market at the end of 2019, its Chinese partner Tencent Holdings Ltd said on Monday.
The Japanese company launched its Switch console in China in December 2019 in partnership with distributor Tencent, China’s biggest video games and social media company, in a drive to expand the reach of the home-portable device.
The official figures released by Tencent suggest Nintendo has surpassed Microsoft Corp and Sony Corp as the country’s biggest console device seller, according to consultancy Niko Partners.
The 1 million sales figure is bigger than the combined sales of Sony’s PlayStation 4 and Microsoft’s Xbox One over the same period, said Niko Partners analyst Daniel Ahmad.
While early sales were hampered by a limited number of available games and the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in China, they were later boosted by the August release of popular home exercise game “Ring Fit Adventure” in the country.
A Tencent spokesman called the sales of the 2,099 yuan ($323) units “a good start”, and said “the games published on Nintendo Switch (China-Exclusive Version) have been well received by the market.”
Globally, Nintendo forecasts it will sell 24 million Switch units for year ending March 2021.
Console games are still considered a niche market in China, the world’s biggest video games market, where most of the focus is on mobile games.
The country banned console games until 2014, with consumers only able to access them via the grey market.
Microsoft’s Xbox entered China in 2014 and Sony’s PlayStation 4 consoles a year later.
Switch consoles sold in China are locked and buyers can only play games that are approved by regulators. Tencent has released 13 games for the China Nintendo Switch so far, but hits such as “The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild” and “Animal Crossing” have yet to be green lighted.
Niko Partners forecasts China’s console market revenue will reach $2.15 billion in 2024, double that of 2019, due to the success of Switch and the next generation console launches. Most games published for the China Nintendo Switch are from local developers, said Niko’s Ahmad.
“China is important to Nintendo because the country does not yet have a console culture in the same way that the U.S. or Japan does, which represents a growth opportunity for the company.”
($1 = 6.4848 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Pei Li; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)