Capcom has updated its listing of Platinum Titles, games that have passed 1 million copies sold, for fiscal year 2025. The listing includes games like Monster Hunter Wilds, Resident Evil 4 Remake, Monster Hunter Rise, and more.
The updated listings are as follows:
- Monster Hunter Wilds – 10.1 million units
- Resident Evil 4 Remake – 9.9 million units (increased by 700,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Monster Hunter Rise – 17.1 million units (increased by 400,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Monster Hunter Rise: Sunbreak – 9.8 million units (increased by 400,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Resident Evil 2 – 15.4 million units (increased by 400,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Resident Evil Village – 11.3 million units (increased by 400,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Monster Hunter World: Iceborne – 15.2 million units (increased by 300,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Resident Evil 3 Remake – 9.9 million units (increased by 300,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Resident Evil 7 biohazard – 14.7 million units (increased by 300,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Monster Hunter: World – 21.5 million units (increased by 200,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Street Fighter 6 – 4.6 million units (increased by 200,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Devil May Cry 5 – 9.1 million units (200,000 additional units since December 31, 2024)
- Dragon’s Dogma II – 3.7 million units (increased by 200,000 since December 31, 2024)
- The Great Ace Attorney Chronicles – 1.2 million units (increased by 100,000 since December 31, 2024)
- Resident Evil 4 (Switch) – 1 Million Units
Monster Hunter Wilds recently reached eight million copies sold in just three days, setting an all-new sales record for Capcom. After the April title update, a second title update will release in summer 2025, which will feature a new monster and more event quests.
Monster Hunter Wilds is now available for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC via Steam. Final Weapon gave Monster Hunter Wilds a 4/5 score, noting that it’s an excellent entry in the long-running series and a worthy follow-up to Capcom’s most successful game ever. Despite the performance issues, Capcom delivers one of the best-feeling combat systems in Monster Hunter Wilds along with the franchise’s first legitimate story mode.