Being second only to the PS2's doesn't raise any alarms in your head? Let's look at the facts:Retronomy wrote:The difference with the PSX however, is that after the popularity of FF7 and subsequent square titles on the PSX, countless JRPGs were being churned out left and right by more than a few North American publishers. The list of JRPG releases, successful or not, for the PSX absolutely dwarfs the snes's list. There's especially so many obscure games that got stupidly small print runs (that would put atlas to shame) on that system. People such as Working Designs come to mind. PSX's RPG list is second only to the PS2's, as far as I'm aware.
49.10 million SNES units were sold
40 million Genesis units were sold
102.49 million PS1 units were sold
155 million PS2 units were sold
PS1 brought not RPGs but gaming to the masses. Of course the PS1 is going to have more RPGs than the SNES, and of course the PS2 is going to have more RPGs than the PS1. But the PS2 library is larger than the PS1 library, and the PS1 library is larger than the SNES library. Given that all three were RPG powerhouses, it's circular logic to argue that the PS1 RPGs were more mainstream.
As I have shown with pure sales, given a list of the best-selling games, PS1 doesn't have that many more big selling RPGs than the SNES does, and all but one was a Squaresoft title, and of those Squaresoft titles 4 out of the 6 were Final Fantasy. Meanwhile, the it's no coincidence that after Nintendo's push for Final Fantasy on the NES, that IV and VI would be big hits here (and V was huge in Japan, too).
If we look at PS2 numbers, the same trend follows. Games which sold over 1 million are:
// sold very well in US and Japan
FFX 6.6 million
FFX-2 4.06 million
FFXII 5.2 million
// The opposite of the FF games, these two were sold twice as much in the US than in Japan
Kingdom Hearts 4.78 million
Kingdom Hearts 2 3.89 million
// Oddities
Dragon Quest VIII 3.6 million in Japan, 430,000 in North America
Star Ocean 740,000 in US, 533,373 in Japan
Xenosaga 1 million total
It seems to me that JRPGs were just as popular then as ever. Excepting a few well-known or suitably American titles like Kingdom Hearts and Super Mario RPG, the refrain that the PS1 made JRPGs "mainstream" seems mistaken. Rather, it's purely a numbers game. There were just more, so they seemed more mainstream. I think the issues of getting Xenoblade Chronicles here proves as much.