Author: David Amatulli
Date: 14:33:31 07/05/00
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On July 05, 2000 at 17:18:09, Dann Corbit wrote: >On July 05, 2000 at 16:39:20, John Merlino wrote: >>On July 05, 2000 at 15:54:03, Mogens Larsen wrote: >>>On July 05, 2000 at 15:22:08, Dann Corbit wrote: >>>>On the other hand, if the stuff on the box is true, then it has sold 100 times >>>>as many programs as all of the others put together. >>> >>>That's probably true. I guess it appeals to a broader audience, which isn't bad >>>IMHO. There has to be something for everyone and by most accounts a nice >>>program. >>> >>>Best wishes... >>>Mogens >> >>Just in case anybody's curious (and I'm DEFINITELY sure that this is off-topic, >>but what the hell), the entire Chessmaster line (CM7000, CM6000, CM5500, CM5000, >>CM6000 Mac, Chessmaster II Playstation and Chessmaster for the Color GameBoy) >>sold approximately 625,000 total units in 1999, for a total revenue of just >>under $7 million after returns. >> >>Chessmaster 7000, for 1999 (really only a little less than the last three months >>of the year), sold about 97,000 units, for about $2.7 million in revenue after >>returns. >> >>I would certainly call that a "broader audience" than the other programs that >>are talked about here, but I would never say that one program is better than >>another simply because of sales (or, on the other hand, isn't worth buying just >>because you can find it on the shelf next to The Sims). > >Actually, I think this information will be incredibly interesting to many of the >chess programmers, because it gives information about the size of the market. I don't get to Comp USA to often but it was't till this year that I finally seen Fritz on the shelf, You can't get people to buy the prog if it's not seen to be bought!
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