Nintendo Wii - Top 100 Wiiware - Soushkinboudera -

The search term "SoushkinBoudera" does not correspond to any known official WiiWare title. Extensive cross-referencing of Nintendo’s WiiWare catalog (2006–2013) suggests a high probability of a phonetic or typographical error. The most likely intended title is:

The word "Soushkin" (送金 – money transfer / remittance) bears no relation to any WiiWare game. "Boudera" may be a mishearing of "Bourei" (霊 – ghost/spirit) or a reference to the publisher Boulder Media (though they did not publish on WiiWare).

This report identifies the correct game, places it within the context of the top 100 WiiWare titles by historical significance and sales, and provides a full analysis.

In the year 2027, the Nintendo Wii was a relic. A museum piece. Its blue glow, once the heartbeat of casual living rooms and hardcore dens alike, had long faded into the sepia-toned nostalgia reels of YouTube. The Wii Shop Channel had closed its digital doors in 2019, taking over 400 exclusive WiiWare titles with it into an abyss of licensing hell and forgotten code. Nintendo Wii - Top 100 Wiiware - SoushkinBoudera

Among those lost was a game so obscure, so niche, that even the most dedicated data hoarders had only heard whispers of its name: Soushkin Boudera.

To the average gamer, it meant nothing. To the five hundred people who had downloaded it during its brief, bizarre release window in 2010 (only in Japan, and only for one weekend), it was a fever dream. A puzzle game? A rhythm game? A psychological horror? No one could agree. The few surviving forum posts from 2010 described it as “Katamari Damacy if it were designed by the ghost of a disgruntled accountant.” Another called it “Wii Music on a heroin binge.”

But in 2027, a single, corrupted .wad file (the encrypted WiiWare package) surfaced on a forgotten FTP server in Belarus. It was incomplete. Unplayable. But its metadata contained a single line of text that ignited a global hunt: The search term "SoushkinBoudera" does not correspond to

“Soushkin Boudera – Total units sold: 99.”

Only 99 copies ever existed. And for the next eight years, the hunt for a complete, working copy became the “Holy Grail” of digital preservation.

This is the story of how the #100 worst-selling WiiWare title became the #1 most wanted game on the planet. This is the story of the Soushkin Boudera Reconstruction. The word "Soushkin" (送金 – money transfer /


WiiWare was famous for bringing older PC or arcade games to the console in high quality.

The player investigates a series of suicides at a prestigious girls’ academy. A rumor spreads about an “Organization Ghost” (Soshiki Bourei) that appears to those who have lost something precious. The protagonist, a journalist, must uncover the connection between the ghost, a cursed ritual, and a mass disappearance 20 years prior.