Tokyo: Japanese video game maker Nintendo's profit dropped by 19% in the first half of its fiscal year compared to the previous year when people turned to its products during pandemic.
Kyoto-based Nintendo Co. reported Thursday 171.8 billion yen ($1.5 billion) profit for the April-September period, down from 213 billion yen in the same period the previous year.
Fiscal half sales slipped 19% to 624 billion yen ($5.5 billion). It did not break down quarterly numbers.
Nintendo, which is behind the Super Mario and Pokemon games, was among the global companies that received a boost from the pandemic by providing at-home entertainment. Nintendo enjoyed strong sales of its game "Animal Crossing: New Horizons" in the April-September period last year. That momentum was hard to maintain into this year, although the game was so popular that it also boosted sales of the Nintendo Switch machines.
But a shortage of computer chips caused by the pandemic is hurting production of those machines. Nintendo lowered its forecast for Switch hardware sales for the second fiscal half by 1.5 million units to 24 million.
The year-end holidays are critical for Nintendo's sales. So far, Nintendo has sold nearly 9.3 million Switch machines worldwide, including the Switch Lite version.
Overall, sales of Nintendo's downloaded software were mixed, while its mobile sales failed to grow as people continued to enjoy older releases, Nintendo said.