Get all your news in one place.
100's of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
GamesRadar
GamesRadar
Technology
Anna Koselke

Pragmata "feels like a spiritual successor to the Xbox 360 and PS3 era of third-person action games," analyst says, and its "staggering" 1 million sales in 2 days come as no surprise

Diana's eyes glow with digital energy in Pragmata.

Pragmata has only been out for a few days now, but it's already more than proven itself with a whopping million sales in two days and an impressive position as one of the best-rated Capcom games on Steam – you know, amid the likes of Resident Evil gems.

It's undoubtedly a good launch for Capcom, with Pragmata perhaps standing as one of the best new games of 2026 – and we might have actual numbers backing this up, too.

Rhys Elliott, head of market analysis at Alinea Analytics, dives into them in a recent online post on Pragmata's quick success, writing, "Capcom is currently cashing in on close to a decade of accumulated player trust with its announcement that Pragmata sold 1M in two days."

Although, as Elliott admits, "Capcom usually reports sold in (including unsold copies to retailers, usually a huge amount as retail is bigger in Japan)," one million is still "a great result for any new game."

More specifically, "It's a staggering result for a new IP in a stony AAA market that’s largely allergic to creative risk right now." The analyst then provides some estimates from his company, giving us even nicer numbers for Pragmata.

"As for our Alinea Analytics estimates," he says, "which are sold THROUGH and don't include retail copies), Pragmata has sold through 574K copies on Steam, generating almost $30M in gross revenue. Meanwhile, Pragmata is nearing 300K on PS5 and is sitting under 100K on Xbox. This means the Steam version is currently outperforming both consoles combined." Honestly, that's pleasantly surprising to hear as a PC gamer myself.

Furthermore, despite Pragmata being an entirely new concept from Capcom – not one backed by previous entries like Resident Evil Requiem – it's doing so well.

"Our player crossover data across platforms shows the sheer concentration of the Capcom faithful in Pragmata's early buyers. For a new IP, the cold-start problem is a hurdle in an already too-loud attention economy. Capcom managed to get around this thanks to its run of pure quality."

That's no small feat, y'all. And, amusingly enough, Pragmata "earned the trust of a very important cohort: high-spending gamers who are primed to buy new games." Who are they, you might ask? "In short, Millennials."

As a Gen Z-er myself, I'd say it's proving to be a hit across all generations – newcomers and longtime Capcom players alike, as "58.4% of Pragmata's PlayStation players also played Resident Evil Requiem."

Elliott praises the new sci-fi shooter once more, stating, "It's pretty clear that core gamers are treating Pragmata one as a must-play entry in the broader Capcom canon, regardless of its new IP status. Word of mouth from the podcast circuit and among players is snowballing nicely."

That's true – heck, it's pretty much all I'm seeing on social media right now… well, that and Tomodachi Life: Living the Dream, of course.

Word of mouth isn't the only reason behind Pragmata's success, however, as the analyst outlines. "Launching at a $60/£50 price point lowered the barrier to entry compared to the new $70 standard for AAA titles – including Capcom's own Resident Evil Requiem this year. The decision to release a playable demo back in December was pivotal in winning players over on this weird concept." Pivotal might even be an understatement.

"Alinea wishlist data confirms this: Steam wishlists spiked by nearly 500K in December 2025, coinciding directly with that demo drop. Wishlisters from the December-to-January window demo period converted at a healthy rate, with huge momentum in the early months of 2026. January wishlisters converted at 5.44%, and March – just before launch – saw a 3.74% conversion rate." The demo was incredibly important, then.

"An inflection point for the marketing and consumer acceptance of Pragmata, which helped drive the entire final marketing push," as Elliott puts it. "Word of mouth spread fast among the target audience."

He touches on nostalgia as well: "Pragmata has been a hit among us ageing Millennial gamers who grew up with more digestible linear action games like these during the Xbox 360 and PS3 era." It's a relatively short story, too, which helps.

"With a roughly 12-hour campaign, Pragmata feels like a spiritual successor to the Xbox 360 and PS3 era of third-person action games. It gives a quality, focused, high-intensity experience that respects the player's time."

He's not the only one who thinks so, either. "Across the 18K Steam reviews we cover in our platform, Pragmata's linear design and manageable length were among the top 10 most common positives."

In fact, "Many Steam reviewers specifically mentioned that they appreciated a 10-15 hour campaign without bloat or filler." I can certainly understand why. Oftentimes nowadays, it feels like there's not much to choose from other than hefty RPGs and daunting open-world titles that you need to devote a hundred or so hours to.

Pragmata manages to hold your attention for not too long, while still having an impact

From its million sales to the figures shared by Elliott here, I'd say Pragmata is definitely doing well – and then some. It's a good sign for any brand-new IP developers may have up their sleeve for the future, that's for sure.

Curious about the new Capcom gem yourself? Be sure to read through our Pragmata review to learn why we think it's an innovative take on third-person shooters.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100's of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.