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God of War Ragnarok has already become the biggest launch in the series' history
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We've all seen how enthusiastic gamers around the world have reacted to the release of God of War Ragnarok. Critics have also had their say on the game, showing their satisfaction with it through their nearly complete reviews on international websites.
So far, 12 parts of the game have been released. Including 6 main versions and 2 games released on mobile device, as well as enhanced parts of the game. It was first released in March 2005 on PlayStation 2.
According to data from GamesIndustry. The PlayStation Portable version released in 2007 was one of the first titles to take first place in the British market. Then the third part, which was released on the PlayStation 3 in 2010, took the first place in the series for the second time in the history of the series, “British Markets”.
Analyst Dorian Bloch, head of GfK Research, told GamesIndustry.biz:
It became a bestseller at the time in terms of first week sales as well as lifetime sales for this franchise.
In 2018, God of War ranked fifth in terms of units and revenue across Sony's formats.
God of War Ragnarok will be number one and is the first crossover title in the series.
Actual sales for the first day have already been higher than any other one-week launch sales for other titles in this franchise
Data analyst and expert Dorian Bloch confirms that 55% of this week's PS5 sales were part of the new God of War hardware bundle.
God of War Ragnarok had a strong launch with mass interaction with the game. Where it was and still leads the trend in many countries and regions on social media platforms and the Internet.
This could be a strong indication that the game will reach a huge demand and could break records, whether at the level of PlayStation exclusives or even at the level of the entire industry around the world.
God Of War Ragnarök is the last major PlayStation title for the year 2022. It has been heavily marketed, both digitally and physically, as we have seen images of Kratos and his son Atreus spread across the walls of buildings, trains and international sales windows.