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Z-Joy's Booth# 6U41 at China Sourcing Fair/AsiaWorld Expo HK., April 12-15th, - 3-9-2010 |
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Warmly welcome to Z-Joy's booth #6U41 at China Soursing Fair, Venue: Aisa
World Expo, Hongkong, on April 12-15,2010
You will find us with our key product series and latest products
there.
1. Accessories for Wii
2. Accessories for Play Station
3. Accessories for Xbox
4. Accessories for NDS
5. Accessories for PSP
6. Accessories for iPhone
Onsite contact person: Ms Basara Cho, sales manager
E-mail: basara@z-joy.con ; sales@z-joy.com ;
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UK Videogames Industry Saw a Strong 2009 - 1-7-2010 |
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UK Videogames Industry Saw a Strong 2009
From ELSPA press releases of 06 January 2010
London, UK, 6th January, 2010 – Last year, 2009, shaped up to be the second-strongest year on record for the UK videogames industry according to ELSPA (the Entertainment and Leisure Software Publishers Association) which today revealed annual sales figures from GfK Chart-Track. Total sales of all videogames software amounted to £1.621 billion, with growth in both the Xbox 360? and PlayStation? 3 formats. The total revenue for console hardware sales amounted to £1.06 billion, a decrease on 2008 mainly due to lowering average retail prices*.
Mike Rawlinson, Director General of ELSPA, said: “We cannot forget that 2009 saw the UK economy in the grip of one of the most severe recessions of recent times, which has naturally impacted on the entertainment industry. It is not surprising that the UK videogames industry has weathered the economic storm so well as games represent great value for money.
“The UK videogames market is maturing – we are not seeing such explosive growth as in 2008, a sure sign that the market is coming of age. Consumers are shopping smarter and gaming is becoming more widespread across all demographics – this is demonstrated by the fact that a videogame (Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2) topped the Amazon best-sellers chart for the first time in 2009. Thanks to continued innovation from games publishers and developers, opening up new types of games and gaming methods, more and more consumers are becoming gamers and the industry is reaching new audiences.”
Nintendo Wii? stormed the field with software sales of over 18 million units in the UK, retaining the title of Number One software format by units sold. Sony’s PlayStation? 3 also saw a dramatic increase by 14 per cent of software units sold, from 10.4 million units in 2008 to 11.9 million units in 2009. Overall, in 2009 UK consumers bought a total of 74.6 million videogame units – which works out at more than one per person in the UK.
However, it was Microsoft’s Xbox 360? which saw the biggest increase in software revenue in 2009, up four per cent from 2008 to earn £459 million and become the number one software format by revenue, overtaking the Nintendo Wii?.
The Sony PlayStation? 3 was the star console this year, posting a two per cent increase of units sold compared to 2008. However it still could not overtake the Nintendo Wii? which retained the lead as the most sold console of 2009. In total, 6.7 million videogame consoles were sold in the UK in 2009, which is one console for every nine people in the UK.
The total value of console/PC gaming peripherals was £630 million in 2009, with total sales reaching 35.8 million units.
Overall, the total gross generated in the UK during the first 52 weeks of 2009 from the sale of all videogames, software, hardware and accessories, was £3.311 billion. This equated to 114.2 million units sold all-told in the UK.
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Nine Gaming Predictions for 2010 - 12-18-2009 |
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Nice
Gaming Predictions for 2010.
With 2009 coming to a close, we offer some odds on what the coming year will bring for the videogame industry.
1.Nintendo Wii sales will decline year over year in North America.
Part of this prediction is based on the simple idea that the Wii has nowhere to go but down, after dominating the North American sales charts for so long. With the system recently dropping from $250 to an even friendlier $200, I have to believe that everyone who really wants a Wii will have already bought one by the end of this holiday season. But this prediction is also driven by the fact that Sony and Microsoft are making a serious push for the market niche Nintendo has carved out -- with lower prices, upcoming motion controllers and a marketing focus on family-friendly gaming. This doesn't mean I think those companies' systems will pass the Wii in yearly or even monthly sales, but unless Nintendo has some new gimmick up its sleeve to reinvigorate interest among the already Wii Fit-ted masses, I don't see Wii sales continuing at their current heights in 2010.
2. PlayStation 3 sales will increase year over year in North America.
Sony's powerhouse is already starting to see a sales bounce thanks to a lower, $299 price point, holiday releases like Uncharted 2: Among Thieves and an effective new ad campaign. This trend should continue well into 2010, when anticipated exclusives like God of War III, Gran Turismo 5, MAG, Heavy Rain and The Last Guardian start rolling in. As more and more people jump on the HDTV bandwagon through the year, I expect Sony's built-in Blu-ray player will make it look like an increasingly compelling all-in-one home entertainment choice to many consumers as well. Whether the increase will be enough to make the PS3 more competitive with the Xbox 360 and Wii is an open question, but the system seems poised to finally show sales improvement of some kind in the coming year.
3. Rhythm-game sales will decline year over year.
Activision CEO Bobby Kotick might say the rhythm-game market isn't saturated, but the slashed sales projections for DJ Hero tell a different story. Despite healthy sales for The Beatles: Rock Band and Guitar Hero 5 this holiday season, the genre feels like it's struggling for the next big idea that will really drive consumers to open up their wallets for that new, must-have instrument-shaped peripheral. There's a chance that new idea could come about sometime next year, but it seems more likely the genre will start to stagnate under slowly growing disinterest in the same old karaoke, guitar- and drumming-based games. That said, I expect the market for downloadable songs for existing Rock Band and Guitar Hero platforms will remain strong throughout 2010.
4. Industry-wide game sales will go up, year over year.
Everyone knows the recession caused the game industry to hit a bit of a slump this year, so some sort of bounce back along with the slowly recovering economy seems likely. But an industry recovery seems even more obvious when you look at the blockbuster-heavy lineup of releases that have already been announced for the first half of the year. Mass Effect 2, God of War III, Heavy Rain, BioShock 2, Alan Wake, Splinter Cell: Conviction, Final Fantasy XIII, Gran Turismo 5 and more all make for a first-half lineup that makes even the impressive first half of 2009 look like amateur hour. And that's all months before the historically strong holiday season, which will likely see more yet-to-be-announced blockbusters. All in all, it's shaping up to be a strong year for gaming.
5. At least one download-only release will be on the shortlist for the Game of the Year awards.
The downloadable-games market went a long way to breaking free of its image as retail's neglected cousin this year, with console releases like Flower, Shadow Complex and the Bit.Trip series, indie PC games like Auditorium and iPhone games like Zen Bound garnering widespread critical acclaim and attention (if not necessarily sales). But the consensus picks for 2009's game of the year are still congealing around big-budget, cinematic retail releases. This may not be the case next year, as developers stretch the bounds of what downloadable games can be and increasingly use downloads as a way to get around the used-game-centric retail market. Maybe "Game of the Year" contention is a little bit lofty, but regardless, I expect the downloadable-game market to continue its march toward relevance in the coming year.
6. No PS3 motion control or Natal-exclusive games will be on the shortlist for Game of the Year.
For all the hype surrounding the unveiling of Sony and Microsoft's camera-based motion controller's at this year's E3, I think the technologies are bound to be disappointments when they actually come out. After a burst of interest surrounding their release, I expect both controllers will be inundated with gimmicky, shallow, motion-controlled games (see: the majority of the Wii software lineup), and both will lack the killer apps needed to really drive widespread adoption. Without that sort of critical mass, most developers and publishers will only grudgingly support the devices, adding half-hearted camera-control support to games that also have more traditional controls, which critics and consumers will continue to largely prefer. By the end of the year, the hype will have given way to reality and Sony and Microsoft will slowly scale back their focus on these new controllers, preparing instead to integrate better motion controls into their next consoles.
7. The PSP Go will drop in price during the first half of the year.
Depending on who you listen to, the initial sales numbers for the PSP Go have either been "in line with expectations" (according to Sony) or merited "strong reservations" about the PSP's chances in the U.S. (according to a Gamasutra analysis). Either way, the redesign has apparently not become the runaway success Sony needed to turn around its portable system's also-ran image. The Go's main problem seems to be the competition, not from Nintendo's DS, but from Sony's own PSP-3000, which offers more functionality, albeit in a clunkier form factor, for a lower price. As PSP Go inventories start to clog Sony's warehouses, expect it to attempt to clear out the excess by pushing the Go's price to be more in line with the original PSP.
8. At least one new major console or portable system will be announced.
We've already heard hints that the follow-up to the Nintendo DS is in development, and Microsoft has said the next Xbox will launch in 2011 or 2012. This puts both systems on track for some sort of vague official announcement at one of the 2010 trade shows, with an initial hands-on demonstration some months later. I wouldn't count out the possibility of Sony announcing a true follow-up to the PSP, either, especially if the system's sales don't pick up fast (see the PSP Go prediction, above). Expect Nintendo and especially Sony to be a little slower to announce their follow-up consoles, the former because the Wii is still going strong and the latter because Sony has loudly insisted that the PS3 is meant to be on the market for 10 years.
9. Nintendo will announce a portable Virtual Console of Game Boy classics for the DSi. OK, this one is a bit of wishful thinking on my part. If Nintendo was going to do something like this, it probably would have announced it alongside the DSi Shop and prepared it for the launch of the system. Still, I'm willing to risk being wrong on this one, on the off chance that someone at Nintendo will see this article and say, "Hey, that's a good idea. Let's do it!" Please?
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DSi XL Still Most Popular Console in Japan - 12-14-2009 |
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DSi XL Still Most Popular Console in Japan
Nintendo's jumbo-sized DSi XL (known as the LL in Japan) continues to have great success several weeks after its initial launch. According to retail sales tracking done by Media Create, the DSi XL was the top selling console in the entire country last week, topping even the Playstation 3 at retail. Some people were initially skeptical that this new DSi aimed at adults would set the world on fire, but clearly they were wrong (in Japan at least). It will be very interesting to see how the device performs in North America when it is introduced here in early 2010.
Media Create Japanese Hardware Charts for Week Ended December 5th:
01 DSi LL - 67,243 02 Nintendo Wii - 46,673 03 PlayStation 3 - 46,558 04 PlayStation Portable - 38,839 05 DSi - 37,021 06 DS Lite - 7268 07 PSPgo - 3809 08 Xbox 360 - 3685 09 PlayStation 2 - 2057
Japan Software Sales Charts:
01 Professor Layton and the Flute of Malevolent Destiny (DS) 02 Friend Collection (DS) 03 Pokemon Heart Gold / Soul Silver (DS) 04 Wii Fit Plus (Wii) 05 Momotaro Railway 2010: Sengoku Ishin no Hero Daishuugou! no Maki (Wii) 06 Inazuma Eleven 2: Threat of the Invaders - Fire (DS) 07 World Soccer Winning Eleven 2010 (PS3) 08 Mario & Sonic at the Olympic Winter Games (DS) 09 Wii Sports Resort (Wii) 10 Taiko Drum Master Wii: Dodon to 2 Yome! (Wii)
[Source: Gamesindustry.biz]
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Sony Lose Sales Momentum in November? - 12-14-2009 |
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Sony Lose Sales Momentum in November?
As the holiday shopping season kicks into high gear, the monthly NPD results show a surge in sales across all video game consoles. The problem for Sony is that not all surges were equal, and both of the company's platforms lagged behind competitors during the crucial sales month of November. Despite a brand new look, deep price cuts and a strong roster of upcoming exclusives, Sony's PS3 failed to outsell its rival the Xbox 360 last month. The PS3 moved 710,400 units at retail in the United States during November, while Microsoft's machine sold 819,500. Considering the favorable comparisons between the similarly-priced PS3 slim and Xbox 360 Elite, it is puzzling that consumers are still choosing the older Xbox 360 hardware over the BluRay equipped Ps3. Some have suggested that the strong sales of online shooter Modern Warfare 2 skewed the numbers toward Microsoft because users prefer its paid online subscription service over Sony's PSN. Modern Warfare 2 sold considerably more copies on the Xbox 360 platform, suggesting that this is the case.
On the handheld front, news was no better for Sony. Despite recently launching its new download-only PSP Go and introducing a plethora of potential hit games, the PSP failed to set the world on fire last month. Combines platform sales of all models of the PSP were 293,900 compared with Nintendo's impressive showing of 1.7 million DS units sold. It could be that big software releases like Assassin's Creed and Gran Turismo PSP have failed to attract new consumers to the Sony brand.
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US Video Game Hardware & sofeware Sales for November 2009 - 12-14-2009 |
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US Video Game Hardware Sales for November 2009 (October in brackets):
Nintendo DS: 1.70 million (458k) Wii: 1.26 million (507k) Xbox 360: 819.5k (250k) PlayStation 3: 710.4k (321k) Sony PSP: 293.9k (175k) PlayStation 2: 203.1k (118k)
US Video Game Software Sales for November 2009:
1 - Modern Warfare 2 - 360 - 4.20m 2 - Modern Warfare 2 - PS3 - 1.87m 3 - New Super Mario Bros Wii - Wii - 1.39m 4 - Assassin's Creed II - 360 - 794.7k 5 - Left 4 Dead 2 - 360) -744.0k 6 - Wii Sports Resort - Wii - 720.2k 7 - Wii Fit Plus - Wii - 679.0k 8 - Assassin's Creed II - PS3 - 448.4k 9 - Dragon Age: Origins - 360 - 362.1k 10 - Mario Kart Wii - Wii - 315.0k
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PSP Go accessoires ready for your choice - 8-19-2009 |
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unique accessories products we can provide on PSP Go as below:
a. PSP Go cotton bag
b. PSP Go leather bag
c. PSP Go protective bag
d. PSP Go holder
e. PSP Go transparent cover
f. PSP Go speaker
g. PSP Go plug
h. PSP Go card case
i. PSP Go Stand
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New products to compatible with Wii Motion Plus - 8-17-2009 |
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Game
accessoires mold for Wii is newly upgraded and
can be compatible with the Wii
Motion Plus module. new product list as blow:
1. Sport kit 3 in 1
2. Light Sward
3. Sport kit 7 in 1
4. Front cover for remote control
5. Ping-Pong Bat for Wii
6. Controller
7. Light gun
8. the Bow
9. frisbee
10. Padle
....
For more information, please contuct us our sales by sales@z-joy.com
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