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List of best-selling game consoles

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Sony's PlayStation 2 is the best-selling game system overall with over 160 million units worldwide.

A video game console is a standardized computing device tailored for video gaming. The compact size of video game consoles allows them to be easily used in a variety of locations, making them portable. Video game consoles may use one or more data storage devices, such as hard disk drives, optical discs, and memory cards for downloaded content.

A home video game console requires a computer monitor or television set as an output. Handheld controllers are commonly used as input devices. Sanders Associates engineer Ralph H. Baer along with company employees Bill Harrison and Bill Rusch licensed their television gaming technology to contemporary major TV manufacturer Magnavox. This resulted in the 1972 release of the Magnavox Odyssey—the first commercially available video game console.

The Nintendo DS product line are the best-selling handheld consoles, selling 154.02 million units worldwide. The majority of sales came from the DS Lite at 93.86 million units.

A handheld game console is a lightweight device with a built-in screen, controls, speakers, and has greater portability than a standard video game console. It is capable of playing multiple games unlike tabletop and handheld electronic game devices. The oldest handheld game console with interchangeable cartridges is the Milton Bradley Microvision from 1979. Nintendo is credited with popularizing the handheld console concept with the Game Boy's release in 1989 and continued to dominate the handheld console market into the early 2000s.

Virtual reality headsets are head-mounted devices with built-in screens that are positioned in front of the user’s eyes. VR headsets intended to play virtual reality games may have handheld controllers and position-tracking accelerometers for user input. Most of these are devices that must be connected to a game console or gaming PC, but some are standalone game consoles, such as the Quest 2 released by Meta Platforms.

Dedicated consoles are a subset of game consoles that are only able to play built-in games. Video game consoles in general are also described as "dedicated" in distinction from the more versatile personal computer and other consumer electronics.

Best-selling game consoles

See also: List of best-selling game consoles by region and List of commercial failures in video games

The following table contains video game consoles that have sold at least 1 million units worldwide either through to consumers or inside retail channels. Each console include sales from every iteration unless otherwise noted. The years correspond to when the initial iteration of the console was first released (excluding test markets).

The first popular home console, the Atari 2600 (1980 version pictured), was released in 1977.
The Family Computer and Nintendo Entertainment System were the best-selling consoles of their time, selling 61.91 million units worldwide. They revitalised the gaming industry in the United States following the video game market crash.
  # Background shading indicates consoles currently on the market.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.
Million-selling game consoles
Platform Type Firm Released Units sold Ref.
PlayStation 2 Home Sony 2000 160 million
Nintendo DS Handheld Nintendo 2004 154.02 million
Nintendo Switch # Hybrid Nintendo 2017 146.04 million
Game Boy & Game Boy Color Handheld Nintendo 1989, 1998 118.69 million
PlayStation 4 Home Sony 2013 117.2 million
PlayStation Home Sony 1994 102.49 million
Wii Home Nintendo 2006 101.63 million
PlayStation 3 Home Sony 2006 87.4 million
Xbox 360 Home Microsoft 2005 84 million
Game Boy Advance Handheld Nintendo 2001 81.51 million
PlayStation Portable Handheld Sony 2004 80 million
Nintendo 3DS Handheld Nintendo 2011 75.94 million
PlayStation 5 # Home Sony 2020 65.6 million
Family Computer/Nintendo Entertainment System Home Nintendo 1983 61.91 million
Xbox One Home Microsoft 2013 ~58 million
Super Famicom/Super Nintendo Entertainment System Home Nintendo 1990 49.1 million
Nintendo 64 Home Nintendo 1996 32.93 million
Mega Drive/Genesis Home Sega 1988 30.75 million
Atari 2600 Home Atari 1977 30 million
Xbox Series X/S # Home Microsoft 2020 28.3 million
Xbox Home Microsoft 2001 24 million
Nintendo GameCube Home Nintendo 2001 21.74 million
Quest 2 # VR headset Reality Labs / Meta 2020 ~20 million
Wii U Home Nintendo 2012 13.56 million
PlayStation Vita Handheld Sony 2011 10–15 million (estimate)
Master System Home Sega 1986 10–13 million
V.Smile & V.Motion Home VTech 2004, 2007 11 million
Game Gear Handheld Sega 1990 10.62 million
PC Engine/TurboGrafx-16 Home NEC/Hudson Soft 1987 10 million
Sega Saturn Home Sega 1994 9.26 million
Dreamcast Home Sega 1998 9.13 million
Master System (Brazilian variants) Home Tectoy 1989 8 million
Dendy (famiclone) Home Micro Genius 1992 6 million
Super NES Classic Edition Dedicated Nintendo 2017 5.28 million
Advanced Pico Beena Home Sega 2005 4.1 million
NES Classic Edition Dedicated Nintendo 2016 3.56 million
WonderSwan & WonderSwan Color Handheld Bandai 1999, 2000 3.5 million
Sega Pico Home Sega 1993 3.4 million
Color TV-Game Dedicated Nintendo 1977 3 million
Intellivision Home Mattel 1980 3 million
Mega Drive (Brazilian variants) Home Tectoy 1990 3 million
N-Gage Handheld Nokia 2003 3 million
ColecoVision Home Coleco 1982 2 million
3DO Interactive Multiplayer Home The 3DO Company 1993 2 million
Neo Geo Pocket & Neo Geo Pocket Color Handheld SNK 1998, 1999 2 million
Magnavox Odyssey² Home Magnavox/Philips 1978 2 million
Sega SG-1000 Home Sega 1983 2 million
Oculus Go VR headset Oculus 2018 2 million (estimate)
Atari 7800 Home Atari 1986 1 million
Atari Lynx Handheld Atari 1989 1 million
Philips CD-i Home Philips 1990 1 million
Telstar Dedicated Coleco 1976 1 million
Atari 5200 Home Atari 1982 1 million
Pegasus (famiclone) Home Micro Genius 1991 1 million

Final sales are greater than the reported figure. See notes.

Notes

  1. Including Nintendo Switch Lite and OLED units
  2. Nintendo only provided a combined sales total. Before Game Boy Color's release in late 1998, previous models sold 64.42 million units combined worldwide.
  3. Microsoft announced in October 2015 that individual platform sales in their fiscal reports will no longer be disclosed. The company shifted focus to the amount of active users on Xbox Live as its "primary metric for [sic] success". Monthly active Xbox Live users reached nearly 90 million by Q3 2020. Xbox 360: Production ended in 2016; 84 million in total lifetime sales. Xbox One: Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella unveiled at a December 3, 2014, shareholder presentation that 10 million units were sold. Most third-party estimates put the total number of Xbox One units sold by the end of 2019 at "around 50 million". Market data and analytics firm Ampere Analysis Insights estimated the Xbox One had sold 51 million units by Q2 2020. Microsoft announced on July 17, 2020, that they would cease manufacturing the Xbox One S All-Digital Edition and Xbox One X, though production of the Xbox One S would continue.
  4. 30.75 million sold by Sega worldwide as of March 1996, not including sales of third-party licensed consoles from manufacturers such as Majesco Entertainment in the United States (which projected it would sell 1.5 million) or Tec Toy in Brazil (listed separately).
  5. PlayStation Vita: Third-party estimates range from 10–15 million. Glixel stated in June 2017 that 15 million were sold, while the Electronic Entertainment Design and Research suggests several million less by the end of 2015. Production ceased in Japan in March 2019.
  6. 10–13 million, not including Brazilian variants. Screen Digest wrote in a 1995 publication that the Master System's active installed user base in Western Europe peaked at 6.25 million in 1993. Those countries that peaked are France at 1.6 million, the United Kingdom at 1.35 million, Germany at 700 thousand, Spain at 550 thousand, the Netherlands at 200 thousand, and other Western European countries at 1.4 million. However, Belgium peaked in 1991 with 600 thousand, and Italy in 1992 with 400 thousand. Thus it is estimated approximately 6.8 million units were purchased in this part of Europe. 1 million were sold in Japan as of 1986. 2 million were sold in the United States. Not including sales of licensed Tectoy variants in Brazil (listed separately).
  7. Designed by Hudson and manufactured and marketed by NEC.
  8. Bandai released three WonderSwan iterations. A March 2003 Famitsu article reported the original (March 1999) and color (December 2000) versions sold approximately 3 million units combined, while the SwanCrystal (July 2002) sold over 200 thousand units. Bandai announced the transition from hardware to third-party development in February 2003 due to declining sales and will supply software to the competitor's Game Boy Advance by March 2004. Average weekly Famitsu sales during the transition were only a couple hundred units, and the SwanCrystal went build to order starting in autumn 2003. WonderSwan hardware designer Koto claimed over 3.5 million were sold.
  9. Sega sold this amount as of April 2005. Its successor launched on August 6, 2005. Majesco re-manufactured and distributed the Pico in the United States starting at the end of 1999.
  10. The ColecoVision reached 2 million units sold by the spring of 1984. Console quarterly sales dramatically decreased at this time, but it continued to sell modestly with most inventory gone by October 1985.
  11. Atari reported on June 1, 1988 that 7800 sold more than million units to date. Production and support of the 7800 was officially discontiniued on January 1, 1992.
  12. The Wall Street Journal reported in November 1992 approximately 1 million were sold. Around June 1994, Atari shifted its focus from the Lynx to its Jaguar console.
  13. This Philips-reported figure was in The New York Times on September 15, 1994. The CD-i was discontinued in 1998.
  14. Coleco launched Telstar in 1976 and sold a million. Production and delivery issues, and dedicated consoles being replaced by electronic handheld games dramatically reduced sales in 1977. Over a million Telstars were scrapped in 1978, and it cost Coleco $22.3 million that year—almost bankrupting the company.

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  90. Dillon, Roberto (April 12, 2011). The Golden Age of Video Games: The Birth of a Multibillion Dollar Industry. Taylor & Francis. pp. 22–23. ISBN 9781439873236. Archived from the original on January 3, 2014. Retrieved November 26, 2013.
  91. Mehegan, David (May 8, 1988). "Putting Coleco Industries Back Together". The Boston Globe. p. A1. ISSN 0743-1791. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved April 23, 2014. When the game crashed hard, earnings fell 50 percent in 1977 and the company lost $22 million in 1978, barely skirting bankruptcy after Handel -- then chief financial officer -- found new credit and mollified angry creditors after months of tough negotiation.
  92. Schrage, Michael (May 22, 1984). "Atari Introduces Game In Attempt for Survival". The Washington Post. p. C3. ISSN 0190-8286. ProQuest 138312072. Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. Retrieved July 29, 2009. The company has stopped producing its 5200 SuperSystem games player, more than 1 million of which were sold.
  93. Paweł Winiarski (May 15, 2015). "Ponad milion sprzedanych egzemplarzy. Poznajcie historię Pegasusa - najpopularniejszej konsoli w Polsce" [More than one million copies sold. Learn about the history of Pegasus - the most popular console in Poland]. AntyWeb (in Polish). Retrieved July 22, 2023.

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