After
nearly two weeks after the North American launch,
the Nintendo Wii is finally available in its home country of Japan. Of course,
we use the term “available” rather loosely, as trying to find a Wii for sale in
the Land of the Rising Sun borders on the side of impossible. What happened a
couple weeks ago here is happening over there.
If
Nintendo’s claims are to be believed, 400,000 Wii consoles
were available for launch, and all of which have found lovely Japanese homes.
This places the Japanese Wii population at four times greater than that of the PlayStation 3.
Even
with Nintendo’s boasts of plenty supply in comparison to its competitor, gamers
still lined up the night before launch in hopes of taking home a console. More
than 3,000 people stood outside of Bic Camera in Tokyo, according to shop
spokeswoman Naoko Ito. 1,000 of the people there had preordered, with the other
2,000 holding tickets representing the store’s remaining stock. Most gamers who
got in line before 5:40 a.m. took home a Wii.
A
photo blog on Kotaku gives a look at the night’s experience at Yodobashi
Camera in Umeda, Osaka. The store called into use its parking
garage to contain its customers until tickets were handed out and patrons could
leave the line for a short while. The waiting
game continued upon return, when finally it all paid off and a Japanese
Wii is secured after navigating through a labyrinth of electronics.
Both
Yodabashi and Bic Camera had crowd control staff on duty using mega phones to
keep those in line in order. The Bic Camera had also set rules to curb the
rampant reselling of the console as experienced with the PS3 by posting a
statement on the company website saying that Wiis will not be sold to anyone
with the intention of reselling it. In practical terms, however, it was just a
polite suggestion, as store representative Ryoko Nakada admits to The Japan Times:
“… we can't tell the difference between customers who are purchasing for resale
and those who aren't.”
While
some of those in the queue may have had black market sales in mind, the
majority of those who stood in line for a Wii wanted it to play, not to sell.
“My
friends and family called me a fool. They don't see a point of rushing to a
store on the launch day when you can get it much easier a while later,” said
Junpei Ito, a 24-year-old company employee. “But joining the line like this is
part of fun.”
In
plain fanatic fashion, student Kentaro Watanabe, who was in line all night, was
dressed up in a Wii Remote controller costume. “I made this (costume) by myself
yesterday,” he said to the BBC. “This
is homage to Nintendo.”