VGChartz

The VGChartz Network is a network of five video game websites - VGChartz, gamrFeed, gamrReview, gamrTV and gamrConnect. VGChartz itself sits at the centre of the VGChartz Network and is a video game sales tracking website that provides weekly sales figures of console software and hardware by region. The site was launched in June 2005 and is owned by Brett Walton.[2][3] Employing ten people,[4] VGChartz provides tools for worldwide data analysis and regular worldwide written analysis of the data it provides.

VGChartz
Type of site
Video game sales tracking, Video game journalism
OwnerBrett Walton
Created byBrett Walton
URLhttp://www.vgchartz.com
Alexa rank 43,146 (October 2019)[1]
LaunchedJune 2005 (2005-06)

VGChartz provides tools for data analysis and charting and regular written analysis of the data referencing major news in the video gaming industry. Sales figures on VGChartz are based on estimates extrapolated from small retail samples.[5] While offering some information about their methodology through their website,[6] VGChartz does not publish any sources on how they get their data. Some sites, including Gamasutra and Wired News, have questioned the reliability of the information presented by the site.[5][7] VGChartz has defended the credibility and reliability of its sales data,[8] often comparing their numbers with the ones published by NPD Group,[9] although some charts have been retroactively adjusted to better match NPD's monthly reports.[5][10]

History

VGChartz began in June 2005 when Brett Walton created an area on everythingandnothing.org.uk (as the site he had created at the time) called "videogame sales charts" which collected publicly available video game sales data in one place for users to view.[11] In July 2006, Brett launched VGCharts.org, a stand-alone version of the sub-site on everythingandnothing and still collecting publicly available data together from across the web.[12] In March 2007, Brett bought the VGChartz.com domain and rebranded the site as VGChartz.[13] With this re-launch came the move from collecting publicly available data to carrying out original research on the videogame market, and VGChartz began to produce its own weekly charts.[14]

In June 2008 Robert Pasarella wrote an article comparing VGChartz and NPD services, advantages and disadvantages, VGChartz being the winner due to the modality on their service.[15] However, in the same month Simon Carless wrote an article in which he criticized VG Chartz for the poor tracking of a video game Iron Man in comparison to NPD, for adjusting data to match other sales tracking firms in certain cases, and for making educated guesses for some figures data for other regions.[5] Brett argued against the claims made by Simon, indicating that he had cherry-picked certain pieces of data to present VGChartz in a bad light rather than present a fair evaluation of the data.[8]

With the launch of PlayStation Move and Kinect towards the end of 2010, renewed interest in the videogame market led VGChartz to report estimates for initial sales of both pieces of hardware.[16][17] Aaron Greenberg, Microsoft Chief of Staff for Interactive Entertainment Business openly criticized VGChartz data for Kinect on his Twitter feed,[18] later adding "Sorry if my note offended".[19] The comments from Greenberg prompted Walton to write an editorial "Why it is so Easy to Blame VGChartz" in which he addressed why media organisations and publishers try to undermine the data and methods on the site.[20]

Criticism

VGChartz receives a large amount of criticism from websites and editors over how they obtain and verify their data. VGChartz' official statement is that they "use a number of proprietrary [sic] and ever-developing methods". Detractors note how the website is ad-supported and claims to track every country's individual hardware and software sales to a single digit, something not even Microsoft or Sony are always capable of achieving.[21]

VGChartz Network

In June 2010, VGChartz launched the VGChartz Network.[22] VGChartz is still the site for sales data. gamrReview was launched as a home for the network's reviews and previews. gamrFeed was launched as a blog-style site for news, editorials, and features. It also aggregates the content from VGChartz and gamrReview. gamrConnect was launched as a site dedicated to the VGChartz community.

VGChartz provides sales data for all current gaming consoles and portables, as well as retail gaming software for all major platforms. The main service provided by VG Chartz is weekly charts of hardware and software sales for the video game consoles sold by Nintendo, Sony, and Microsoft. This data is presented in three separate charts that each cover one of the three main video game markets (Japan, North America, and EMEAA (Europe, Middle-East, Africa and Asia). The site does provide sales charts for many older consoles, but with the exception of the PlayStation 2, the regular updates focus on the current generation of home consoles and handhelds. The sales figures database can be analyzed with tools on the site for data analysis and graphical representation purposes. Tools available include Americas Pre-orders, which lists the total pre-orders in the Americas for all upcoming titles and the weekly change, Hardware table, where users can see a subset of the data in table form by region and console between set. start and end dates, Million sellers, a table of console software that has sold over a million copies according to the publishers' data is shown, Weekly Records, a chart listing the top selling title in a given week from release, and Milestones, a chart listing the quickest games to a given sales milestone.

gamrFeed is a gaming news blog that features breaking news stories, features, editorials and sales articles. gamrReview features reviews and previews of games as well as a video game database that features reviews, release dates, screenshots, details, cheats, sales data and more. gamrConnect is the social branch of the network featuring active forums and profiles that feature comment walls and a game collection. Users can rate games that they own on a 1-10 scale, as well as comment on various video games own comment walls.

gollark: Maybe the original code somehow relies on it being floats rather than u16s but I don't see how it would be.
gollark: As opposed to deliberate apioform generation.
gollark: I managed to eke out a few performance improvements and remove a significant amount of dependencies, and yet I can't work out why it's apioforming unwantedly.
gollark: Oh bee oh apiaristic form (class σ).
gollark: It's not meant to look like that and I have no idea why it does.

References

  1. "vgchartz.com Site Overview". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  2. "CB Games Interview: VG Chartz Speaks Out". Cinemablend.com. 2007-06-21. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  3. "The Bitbag Interviews Brett Walton, President Of VGChartz.com". Thebitbag.com. 2007-10-18. Archived from the original on 2011-10-03. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  4. "VGChartz Ltd - Company Profile". Linkedin.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  5. Carless, Simon (2008-06-23). "Analysis: What VGChartz Does (And Doesn't) Do For The Game Biz". GameSetWatch. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  6. "VGChartz Methodology". Vgchartz.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  7. Previous post Next post (2008-06-23). "Why We Don't Reference VGChartz". Wired.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  8. "Response to Internet Comments about VGChartz". Gamrfeed.vgchartz.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  9. TheSource (2007-10-19). "NPD Data vs. VGC Data for the September 2007 Sales (9/2/07 to 10/6/07)". Retrieved 2007-11-10.
  10. Walton, Brett (2007-11-10). "Where do VG Chartz North American Numbers Come From?". VGChartz Ltd. Retrieved 2010-11-12. If we believe that a particular data set differs significantly from other sources of data (data released into the public domain by tracking firms, manufacturers, analysts) then we do re-check our data and make adjustments to the methods / scaling factors used
  11. "vgsales - everythingandnothing.org EverythingAndNothing". 2006-02-24. Archived from the original on 2006-02-24. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  12. "VGCharts.org". Web Archive. Archived from the original on 2006-07-02. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  13. "VGChartz.com". Web Archive. Archived from the original on 2006-07-02. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  14. "VGChartz.com Welcome Page". Archived from the original on 2007-02-25. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  15. Data on the Web: VGChartz vs. NPD - O'Reilly Radar Archived July 8, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  16. "PlayStation Move Sell-Through Update". Gamrfeed.vgchartz.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  17. "Initial Kinect Sales Revealed". Gamrfeed.vgchartz.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  18. "Greenberg laughs off VGChartz's Kinect sales estimates". Gamer.blorge.com. 2010-11-12. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  19. "aarongreenberg - Twitter Feed". Twitter.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  20. "Editorial: Why it is so Easy to Blame VGChartz". Gamrfeed.vgchartz.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
  21. Carless, Simon (2008-06-23). "Analysis: What VGChartz Does (And Doesn't) Do For The Game Biz". Gamasutra. Retrieved 2014-10-03.
  22. "VGChartz Has Evolved!". Gamrfeed.vgchartz.com. Retrieved 2010-11-18.
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