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A model displays Sony Computer Entertainment's new portable videogame console "PlayStation Vita", while visitors try it out at the annual Tokyo Game Show in Chiba, suburban Tokyo on September 15, 2011. Sony will release its next-generation PS Vita in Japan on December 17.YOSHIKAZU TSUNO/AFP / Getty Images

Sony Corp shifted 321,400 units of the PlayStation Vita, its new handheld game device, in Japan in its first two days on sale, research firm Enterbrain said on Tuesday.

Unfortunately, as the BBC reports, the launch has also been marred by a burst of complaints in which users describe unresponsive touchscreens, crashes and freezes. The company issued an apology of sorts and a statement on its Japanese site, which informed users "some issues regarding PlayStation Vita can be addressed by simple procedures at home."

The opening weekend sales fell short of rival Nintendo Co Ltd's 3DS, which sold 371,000 in its first two days, Enterbrain said. Sales of the 3DS, however, slumped weeks after the launch, forcing Nintendo to slash the price and crushing its profit outlook for the year.

Sony seeks to avoid suffering a similar fate by offering a big slate of 24 games for the Vita at launch. But executives admit the real challenge will come in maintaining sales over the next few years.

Fans in Japan lined up to be among the first to pick up the latest portable game device, which kicked off a global rollout on Saturday. The Vita will be launched in the United States and Europe in February.

Sony's previous portable game device, the PS Portable, sold 166,000 units on the first day of sales in 2004. It has sold 73 million units to date.

With a file from BBC

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