Launch title
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A launch title is a video game that has been made available to consumers synchronously with its respective video game console, meaning they are the only available games at the time of the console's launch. Because they provide first impressions of the console's features and technical abilities, they are extremely important in the video game industry, and many launch titles have been killer apps.
[edit] Quality vs. quantity
Historically, the number of launch titles has been an important factor in deciding the success of a gaming platform. The more games available at launch, the higher the chances that players will find something that interests them. However, the same importance applies to game quality: poor quality games don't sell as well in the long term as high quality ones.
When gearing up for a major console launch, developers and publishers have a decision to make. They can release a large number of launch titles, often accompanied by the promise of more soon after launch, or they can release a few extremely strong titles, or a killer game. Whilst releasing a large number of extremely strong titles is of course preferred, this may not be practical. To balance these choices, developers will often supplement one or two strong titles with third-party or licensed titles to bolster the number of launch titles.
[edit] Launch titles
Here are a few popular games that debuted at launch.
- Duck Hunt and Gyromite 1984 Nintendo Entertainment System (U.S. launch)
- Super Mario Bros. 1985 Nintendo Entertainment System (U.S. re-launch)
- Super Mario World 1990 Super Nintendo Entertainment System
- Super Mario 64 1996 Nintendo 64
- Soul Calibur 1999 Sega Dreamcast
- Halo: Combat Evolved 2001 Xbox
- Call of Duty 2 2005 Xbox 360
- Resistance: Fall of Man 2006 Playstation 3
- The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess 2006 Wii
EGM listed[1] the 10 worst launch titles as:
- Night Trap (Sega CD)
- Street Fighter: The Movie (PlayStation)
- Cybermorph (Atari Jaguar)
- Altered Beast (Sega Genesis)
- Marky Mark: Make My Video (Sega CD)
- Army Men Advance (Game Boy Advance)
- Mortal Kombat Gold (Dreamcast)
- Donkey Kong Jr. Math (NES)
- Fighting Street (Turbografx CD)
- Perfect Dark Zero (Xbox 360)