SEGA Sammy made a minor mistake when they published their latest “Management Meeting” document detailing the various financial aspects of the company. Most of it was standard stuff, such as forecasting the next financial year, but on page 25 there was an intriguing screw-up: sales data for 11 of their games.

The data has now been removed from the PDF, replaced by a blank panel that simply says “Some content is currently under adjustment.”

But the Internet is a difficult place to erase information from, so within the first 0.000001 seconds, people had already taken a screenshot and spread it far and wide. And here it is:

Game FY20 FY21 FY22 FY23 FY24 FY25 Total
Persona 5 Royal (Including Remaster/Multiplat version) (Doesn’t include P5 OG) 1,030,000 700,000 350,000 1,820,000 1,600,000 1,750,000 7,250,000
Sonic Frontiers 3,200,000 760,000 610,000 4,570,000
Team Sonic Racing 1380,000 870,000 520,000 310,000 200,000 220,000 3,500,000
Total War: THREE KINGDOMS 2,100,000 410,000 230,000 230,000 170,000 70,000 3,210,000
Yakuza: Like a Dragon 450,000 720,000 410,000 240,000 680,000 360,000 2,860,000
Sonic Superstars 1,810,000 620,000 2,430,000
Total War: WARHAMMER III 960,000 580,000 420,000 380,000 2,340,000
Shin Megami Tensei V (including Vengeance) 990,000 150,000 10,000 960,000 2,110,000
Persona 3 Reload 1,220,000 850,000 2,070,000
Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth 1,180,000 480,000 1,660,000
Like a Dragon Gaiden: The Man Who Erased His Name 740,000 220,000 960,000

Based on this data, it’s very easy to understand why SEGA is still trying to ride the Persona 5 gravy train. 7.2m copies sold across the last five financial years is very impressive. If we include the vanilla Persona 5 (last reported in 2018 as being 3.2m copies) then Persona 5 is over the 10m mark.

Another notable game that has quietly been doing some work is Team Sonic Racing, shifting 3.5m copies. No wonder there’s a sequel scheduled for this year.

I also noticed that Total War: Warhammer 3 were surprisingly low (2.3m), even compared against Total War: 3 Kingdoms. true, 3 Kingdoms had a few extra years, but I thought the Warhammer license would have counted for more. Perhaps 3 games in that sub-series was just too much.

What do you guys think? Do any of these numbers stand out to you?

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