The Black Friday shopping bonanza appeared to get off to a strong start as consumers flocked to websites and stores to snap up big-screen TVs, gaming consoles, movies and toys.
Those are often the hottest sellers during one of the biggest shopping events of the year. There were also some surprising hits this year, such as a 3-foot-tall teddy bear that sold out within minutes at many Target stores.
The initial Black Friday sales reports began trickling in Friday, but the final numbers won't be in until later this weekend. That's when retailers will get a better handle on how discounts earlier in November impacted sales on Thanksgiving and the actual Black Friday as well as the extent to which online sales sapped away some of the traffic from physical stores.
Retailers put more of their so-called "doorbuster deals" online this year, leading to some hiccups as online traffic overwhelmed some sites.
Neiman Marcus' website was down for several hours on Friday. And some disgruntled online shoppers took to Twitter on Thanksgiving morning to complain that they were having trouble buying some items from Walmart.com.
Ravi Jariwala, a Wal-Mart spokesman, said some shoppers did experience some slowness on its site as the doorbusters were released around 2 a.m. Thursday. This year, he noted, the company put 96 percent of its doorbuster deals online, up from about 90 percent last year.
"Literally as those items went live on the site, we saw an incredible surge in traffic," he said. "The good news is the vast majority of customers were able to check out successfully."
Walmart.com sold out of a 10-foot Skywalker trampoline and a Nintendo 3DS in the first half-hour they went on sale online, he said.