December 14, 2007 9:12 AM PST

Nintendo, GameStop address Wii shortage

Nintendo's North Bend, Wash., distribution center(Credit: Nintendo of America)

The Nintendo Wii launched more than a year ago, and the system is still incredibly hard to find. This long after the system started shipping, people are still camping in front of stores as soon as they hear about new shipments.

Friday morning, Nintendo of America's president and CEO, Reggie Fils-Aime, held a telephone press conference to address the continuing shortage of the Wii.

Fils-Aime said Nintendo hadn't expected as much demand for the Wii as they're getting. Since the launch, he claimed, Nintendo has almost doubled its global production from 1 million to 1.8 million Wiis per month, and tripled its workforce at Nintendo of America's North Bend, Wash., distribution center. The Nintendo president wouldn't say whether Nintendo would further increase its Wii production, but he denied any claims that Nintendo is stockpiling Wiis.

"There was no ability for us to stockpile systems in the summer for the holiday rush," Fils-Aime said. "Enough systems would make everyone, including me, much happier."

According to Fils-Aime, Wiis will be available next week at all major retailers. If past patterns are any indication, however, that "availability" will be limited to shoppers willing to camp out before stores open on Sunday or Monday morning. Since Christmas is just two weeks away, you're probably still going to have some difficulty finding a Wii.

While that seems to be the biggest hope for Christmas Wiis, Reggie also announced a raincheck program in conjunction with GamesStop to get more Wiis out to shoppers in January. Even if Wiis are out of stock, on December 20 and 21, consumers will be able to purchase them for January.

On those two days, if you put down the full retail price of the Wii at a GameStop, you'll receive a raincheck guaranteeing you a Wii in January. The rainchecks will be available only as supplies last, but Fils-Aime said GameStop has "many tens of thousands" of rainchecks available across its 3,000+ stores. Perhaps the Wii-hungry will be camping out next week to get a raincheck for a Wii next month. We'll find out by next Friday.

"We went into the launch with very high expectations," Fils-Aime said. "What we didn't expect was to throw out the whole playbook and essentially create a whole new level of sell-through for this industry. You can't plan for that."

Originally posted at Crave
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 6 comments (Page 1 of 1)
1.8 Mil Mthly Prod, but sells 500k ????????????
by mailbox001 December 14, 2007 1:24 PM PST
If their Producing 1.8 million Wii's a month but sell around 500k then where's the rest?
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It's quite obvious.
by Spartan_458 December 14, 2007 2:08 PM PST
As much as Nintendo fanboys hate to admit, there is either no way that they are producing 1.8 mil Wiis per month, or that they creating an artificial shortage, the latter which seems more likely. According to the latest NPD numbers (and this is for November, mind you), Nintendo sold 981,000 Wiis. That seems likely, seeing as the NPD only takes U.S. numbers and the rest of the world would add up. But what about all the months before that? 300K, 500K per month? Where did all the "1.8 million Wiis per month" go? AS far as I know, the most video games consoles are sold in North America, not Japan and Europe. Come on Nintendo, don't give me this. You've had over a year to work it out. You've known about the shortages. Do something about them.
Reply to this comment
Wii raincheck = Wiiou
by sdierdorf December 14, 2007 4:40 PM PST
Does anyone else think that paying full price in advance is an underwhelming deal?
Reply to this comment
limit a number per customer
by fortheclueless December 15, 2007 12:10 AM PST
The answer to this problem is very simple. Look at all the Wii's on sale on ebay for hundreds more than retail. One way they can address the shortage is to limit the number of wii's per customer at purchase like Apple did the iphone. That still doesn't excuse the fact they severely underestimated demand and haven't adaquately managed the problem. But there are lots of wiis on ebay from the same seller ID which isn't helping.
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