
It may be the understatement of the year but lets face it; Motion gaming is here to stay. The E3 expo has come and gone, leaving in its wake a slew of games to salivate over for the coming months. It’s clear that most developers are beginning to invest some serious time into the concept. Not just for the casual market but for the Hardcore also.
In part one of four, we take an in-depth look at the WiiMote; the pioneer of modern motion gaming. Part two deals with Sony’s highly precise but slightly whacky-looking “Ball-on-a-stick”; PlayStation Move. The third part will deal with the newly christened Kinect, Microsoft’s “hands-off” approach to the future. Finally, the fourth part will deal with Apples combined effort (iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad) to take a bite out of the motion gaming market. Read on for the article...

New classifications will "allow the government, investors, and policymakers to properly understand the industry's economic impact," says UKIE.

Nintendo has announced its financial results for the first 9 months of the fiscal year, new official sales figures for the Nintendo Switch 2, and more.
17M+ units in 6 months! Others on this site are insisting on only 10M units. XD
And as for Switch 1 total sales, it will only take a few months for it to surpass the 160M of PS2.
I still believe the Switch 2 is not gonna be as successful as the OG Switch. We'll see ;)
That is pretty amazing. I love what Nintendo did with the Switch 2 as they fixed every issue I had with the original and it seems devs agree given the amount of 3rd party support it is receiving.
All those clickbait YouTubers and Twitter users are going to be working overtime to try and swing this as a bad thing, when it continues to defy expectations and break records.
The Switch 2 has now outsold the Steam Deck nearly 3x over and is outselling the OG Switch by nearly 5,000,000 with half a year of sales to go for its first year.

Nintendo of America is once again facing labor complaints from one or more of its workers. Game File reports that new charges accuse the Switch 2 manufacturer of violating sections of the National Labor Relations Act dealing with worker organizing and related union activities. These come just a few years after the company settled a previous labor charge with a former tester for $26,000.