This year's DS sales figures were in fact less than last fiscal year, but that didn't stop total sales beating those of the Game Boy (and Game Boy Pocket, and related models) and Game Boy Color, which had combined lifetime sales of 118.69 million units worldwide.
Pokémon HeartGold/SoulSilver's 8.4 million units sold and The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks' 2.61 million units, along with the Japan-only Tomodachi Collection with 3.2 million units, have helped to increase the number of DS million-sellers to 114 from 91 as of the last fiscal year.
Sales of Nintendo hardware lagged until the holiday season. The combination of a Wii price reduction, fewer strong software releases, and appreciation of the yen meant that total sales were down 22% at 1,434.3 billion yen. Sales outside of Japan came to 1,206.6 billion yen, accounting for 84.1% of total business.
This meant that total Wii hardware sales worldwide were 20.53 million units for the fiscal year, giving a total of 70.93 million units sold to date. This is the best sales performance for a Nintendo console in history. On Wii, million-selling titles increased to 79 from 54 last fiscal year, pushed by 10-million-plus sellers Wii Sports Resort (16.14 million worldwide), Wii Fit Plus (12.65 million worldwide), and New Super Mario Bros. Wii (14.7 million worldwide).
Despite a pessimistic media reception to these sales numbers, Iwata stated that selling 20 million Wii consoles (with plans to sell 18 million more next fiscal year) was still a good sales performance that would be a "high hurdle" for the company to beat in the future.
Iwata clearly stated his feelings on the matter. "I'm not pessimistic, and this is not a pessimistic forecast."