Today is Wednesday, so we get the usual Media Create charts, which detail the Japanese gaming market. This week we get a look at the sales numbers for the period of February 12th through February 18th.

Below you can check out the full software chart:

Monster Hunter World – PS4 – 85, 322/1,836,291 Secret of Mana – PS4 – 36,042/New Splatoon 2 – Switch – 21,815/2,042,844 IDOLiSH 7 Twelve Fantasia! – PS Vita – 21,481/New Dynasty Warriors 9 – PS4 – 21,180/138,675 Mario Kart 8 Deluxe – Switch – 19,280/1,346,387 Secret of Mana – PS Vita – 17,947/New Toaru Majutsu no Virtual-On – PS4 – 17,938/New Sword Art Online: Fatal Bullet – PS4 – 12,981/88,604 Mario + Rabbids: Kingdom Battle – Switch – 12,776/142,591 Super Mario Odyssey – Switch – 12,640/1,614,506 The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild – Switch – 11,764/871,528 Bayonetta Non-Stop Climax Edition – Switch – 11,694/New Bayonetta 2 – Switch – 9,532/New Pokémon Ultra Sun/Ultra Moon – 3DS – 9,358/1,558,042 Toaru Majutsu no Virtual-On – PS Vita – 9,284/New Dragon Ball FighterZ – PS4 – 5,975/88,943 Mario Party: The Top 100 – 3DS – 5,842/161,624 ARMS – Switch – 4,234/369,040 1-2-Switch – Switch – 4,194/399,757

Which brings us to the hardware chart:

PS4 – 41, 496 Switch – 39, 303 PS4 Pro – 8,006 New 2DS XL – 5,778 PS Vita – 4, 959 New 3DS XL -3,423 2DS – 959 Xbox One X – 133 Xbox One – 57

So, yet again Capcom's Monster Hunter: World is firmly at the top of the charts, and that has definitely helped the PS4 hold its edge against the Switch when it comes to hardware sales. Square Enix's Secret of Mana also had a fairly solid debut with about 54,000 copies sold between PS4 and PS Vita.

The Nintendo Switch remasters of Bayonetta and Bayonetta 2 had a pretty disappointing debut with about 20,000 copies sold at retail combined. Ultimately, it's just another signal of the fact that Japanese gamers really don't care all that much about remasters. Secret of Mana was mostly saved from this trend because it's more akin to a remake, and the original game is old enough that many contemporary gamers haven't played it, while still benefiting from the nostalgia factor for those who did.

Another very relevant detail comes from today's issue of Weekly Famitsu. The magazine reveals that Monster Hunter World sold 652,614 copies between January 26th and January 28th. According to Famitsu's estimate (which normally differs from Media Create slightly probably due to different estimation methods and retail sources) the game sold 2,003,026 copies in its first week combining retail and digital, with a rate of full-game digital downloads of 36%.

This potentially places the game as the second or third best debut for a Monster Hunter title ever.