The game industry generated $1.32 billion in March, down 11 percent year-over-year. However, game consumers have still dropped more cash in 2018 than 2017 so far — sales have hit $3.41 billion, up 15 percent year-over-year from $2.98 billion, according to the industry-tracking firm The NPD Group.

March didn’t see many blockbuster releases, as compared to 2017 when The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild and Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon: Wildlands debuted. But it did witness the rise of 2018’s new bestseller: Ubisoft’s Far Cry 5. Players have said yes to the latest installment in the open-world series, which became the fastest-selling title in the franchise and generated $310 million in its first week.

Here are the numbers for March:

Total: $1.316 billion (down 11 percent from $1.478 billion in March 2017)

$1.316 billion (down 11 percent from $1.478 billion in March 2017) Hardware: $331 million (down 32 percent from $485 million)

$331 million (down 32 percent from $485 million) PC and console software: $613 million (down 10 percent from $682 million)

$613 million (down 10 percent from $682 million) Accessories: $372 million (up 20 percent from $310 million)

And here is how 2018 is comparing so far to 2017 in terms of year-to-date dollar sales:

Total: $3.41 billion (up 15 percent from $2.98 billion in 2017 year to date)

$3.41 billion (up 15 percent from $2.98 billion in 2017 year to date) Hardware: $925 million (up 13 percent from $817 million)

$925 million (up 13 percent from $817 million) PC and console software: $1.53 billion (up 8 percent from $1.42 billion)

$1.53 billion (up 8 percent from $1.42 billion) Accessories: $956 million (up 29 percent from $740 million)

“Far Cry 5 debuts as the top-selling title of March 2018 and instantly becomes the best-selling title of 2018,” NPD analyst Mat Piscatella said. “Far Cry 5 set a new launch month sales record for the Far Cry franchise, with consumer spending on full-game sales nearly doubling that of previous franchise best, Far Cry 3. Publisher Ubisoft is the leading publisher in both March and 2018 year to date (January through March).”

Software

Far Cry 5 Sea Of Thieves MLB 18: The Show Kirby Star Allies* Grand Theft Auto V Call of Duty: WWII Mario Kart 8* Ni No Kuni II: Revenant Kingdom NBA 2K18 Monster Hunter: World Super Mario Odyssey* The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild* PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds** Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six: Siege A Way Out** Assassin’s Creed: Origins Dragon Ball: Fighterz FIFA 18** Splatoon 2* UFC 3

*No digital sales included

**No PC digital sales included

Far Cry 5 swept the console charts, but it’s not the only new game that saw success last month. Microsoft and Rare’s co-op pirate simulator Sea of Thieves launched on March 20 and earned a No. 2 spot in the best-sellers list despite only rolling out to Xbox One and Windows 10. Its debut came after several closed-beta sessions that drummed up hype. More than a million players set sail on the open ocean within the first two days, crashing its servers at one point with all their plundering and pillaging.

“Sea of Thieves was the second best-selling game of March, and is the eighth best-selling game of 2018 year to date,” said Piscatella. “Sea of Thieves generated the highest launch month sales for any title produced by developer Rare since tracking by The NPD Group began in 1995.”

Along with Far Cry 5, other franchises also set launch month records. Sony’s MLB 18: The Show and Hal Laboratory’s Kirby: Star Allies both had the best-selling debuts in their series histories.

Xbox One

Far Cry 5 Sea Of Thieves PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds Call of Duty: WWII Grand Theft Auto V Monster Hunter: World NBA 2K18 A Way Out Tom Clancy’s Rainbow Six: Siege Assassin’s Creed: Origins

PlayStation 4

Far Cry 5 MLB 18: The Show Ni No Kuni II: Revenant Kingdom Grand Theft Auto V Monster Hunter: World Call of Duty: WWII NBA 2K18 A Way Out Dragon Ball: Fighterz FIFA 18

Nintendo Switch (physical only)

Kirby Star Allies Mario Kart 8 Super Mario Odyssey The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild Splatoon 2 Mario & Rabbids: Kingdom Battle Pokken Tournament DX Bayonetta 2 Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim ARMS

Nintendo 3DS

Detective Pikachu Pokemon: Ultra Sun Pokemon: Ultra Moon Mario Kart 7 Super Smash Bros. Minecraft Super Mario Maker Super Mario 3D Land Kirby: Battle Royale Mario Party: The Top 100

The best-selling games of 2018 so far

Far Cry 5 Monster Hunter: World Dragon Ball: Fighterz Call of Duty: WWII Grand Theft Auto V NBA 2K18 PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds** Sea Of Thieves MLB 18: The Show Mario Kart 8*

The best-selling games over the last 12 months

Call of Duty: WWII NBA 2K18 Destiny 2** Madden NFL 18 Super Mario Odyssey* Star Wars: Battlefront II 2017** Grand Theft Auto V Mario Kart 8* Assassin’s Creed: Origins The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild*

Hardware and accessories

Compared to March 2017, consumers spent less on hardware last month — $331 million, down 32 percent from $485 million. But year to date, hardware-spending is at a high, generating $925 million so far in 2018. This was driven mainly by Microsoft’s Xbox One, though Sony’s PlayStation 4 remains the best-selling console in March and 2018. The Nintendo Switch 32GB with red and blue Joycon controllers was the best-selling hardware in March and 2018.

While folks weren’t spending as much on consoles last month, accessories saw an uptick thanks to the popularity of multiplayer games like certain wildly popular battle royale hits.

“Both PlayStation 4 and Xbox One achieved accessories sales growth of more than 40 percent in both the month of March as well as year to date 2018,” said Piscatella. “The headsets/headphones segment is driving accessories growth across both platforms, likely driven by the increase in popularity of multiplayer games such as Fortnite from Epic Games.”