Call of Duty and PlayStation 5 Dominate U.S. Game Sales in a Subdued January Market

20 February

fde930e9.png

The U.S. video game market experienced a predictably slow January, with minimal new releases and a post-holiday lull, allowing Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 to retain its position as the month's top-selling game and the PlayStation 5 to lead in console sales.

According to analysis from Circana senior director and analyst Mat Piscatella, the PS5 topped hardware sales in both units and dollars, followed by the Nintendo Switch 2 in second place for both metrics. Overall hardware spending increased by 16% compared to last year, driven by a rise in Switch 2 sales—though this is a gain from zero, as the Switch 2 wasn't available in the previous year. This offset declines in spending on the PS5 (down 17%), Xbox Series (down 27%), and Switch 1 (down a significant but expected 79%). Accessories spending dropped 5% to $185 million.

In content, spending rose 3% year-over-year to $4.3 billion, primarily fueled by a 23% surge in subscription spending. Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 remained the best-selling game, with NBA 2K26 holding steady at No. 2 and Madden NFL 26 climbing from No. 4 last month to No. 3 in January. Battlefield 6, previously at No. 3, fell to No. 5.

The sole new entry into the top 20 was Code Vein II, debuting at No. 11. Notably, Final Fantasy 7: Remake soared from No. 225 to No. 9, likely due to its releases on Xbox Series and Nintendo Switch 2. Fallout 4 also made a substantial leap from No. 68 to No. 20, possibly boosted by Season 2 of the Fallout TV show and a major price drop on Steam at month's end.

Piscatella also noted to IGN that outside the top 20, both Fable Anniversary and Animal Crossing: New Horizons saw notable sales increases. Fable Anniversary benefited from a new trailer for the upcoming Fable game, while Animal Crossing: New Horizons gained traction from DLC and its Switch 2 release.

Total gaming spending reached $4.7 billion, up 3% from the previous year. While not an electrifying start to 2026, January has never been known for explosive game sales.

  • Indicates that some or all digital sales are excluded from Circana's data, as certain publishers, including Nintendo, do not provide full digital sales information for this report.
For an answer, you can log in