In its eighth month on the market, the Nintendo       3DS™ system crossed 1.65 million units sold in the U.S.,       according to the NPD Group, which tracks video game sales in the United       States. This milestone puts the platform on track to surpass the       first-year total of Nintendo DS™,       the best-selling game platform in U.S. history.    
      The Nintendo DS system sold 2.37 million units in its first 12 months       (November 2004-October 2005), with approximately 50 percent of those       sales occurring in the holiday time frame. With its first holiday season       and the launches of the Super       Mario 3D Land™ and Mario       Kart™ 7 games on the horizon,       Nintendo 3DS is poised to eclipse that number and establish a new       benchmark for hand-held gaming launches in the United States.    
“With a massive lineup of software on the way and the first-year sales       record of Nintendo DS in its sights, Nintendo 3DS enters its first       holiday season with a full head of steam,” said Scott Moffitt, Nintendo       of America’s executive vice president of Sales & Marketing.    
      Other Nintendo news from the month includes:    
        Nintendo sold more than 675,000 combined hardware units in October.         This includes more than 250,000 units of Nintendo 3DS, nearly 250,000 Wii™systems and nearly 180,000 units of the Nintendo DS family of         systems.      
        For the year, Nintendo has sold a combined 7 million hardware units         and more than 55 million units of software have been sold for Nintendo         platforms. Both of these numbers should increase with the Nov. 20         launch of The Legend of         Zelda™: Skyward Sword for Wii.      
        Both Wii, up 8 percent year over year, and Nintendo DS, up 23 percent         over the previous month, demonstrated strong momentum heading into         their respective sixth and eighth holiday seasons. In total, the two         platforms have sold more than 87 million combined hardware units and         more than 540 million combined units of software in the United States.      
      For more information about Nintendo, visit http://www.nintendo.com.
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