People prefer consoles because they are less complicated to set up. A variation on my 3rd point in the list of why folks opt for consoles. You really love circular reasoning.
No some people prefer consoles because they are easy to set up. Some people prefer them because they are cheap entry points. Some people prefer them because they are invested in the ecosystem. Some people prefer them because that how they play with friends and families. Some prefer them because they are easy to travel with. Some people prefer them because they prefer disc based media and rentals.
There are plenty of reasons that people game on consoles over PC that you are choosing to ignore.
Frankly thses generalizations are simply unbecoming of someone in your profession.
vcc said:
It's not loss of revenue, release on PC as well will increase revenue for those games but it comes at the expense of future XB1 sales.
Yes, It's the loss of an Xbox sale, to a relatively tiny group of potential Xbox customers who were never going to add significantly to the bottom line because THEY HAVE NO INTENTIONS OF BUYING MULTIPLATS ON XBOX.
So they are converting that customer to a Windows customer, where they'll get more revenue from the digital sale of exclusive games, and increase their customer base w/o negatively impacting the buying potential of their console base.
vcc said:
I do understand you're having a hard time grasping the argument because you always circle back to a point I didn't make (likely on purpose as you don't have a response to my actual arguement).
The reason why future XB1 will be lost is:
- The value proposition got worse, there are less reasons to specifically get a XB1worse only for a small subset of non profitable customers
- It shows MS is not prioritizing the XB1microsoft is perfectly capable of expanding priorities. They aren't trading priorities
- Potential customers of the XB1 who also have a PC may opt to upgrade the PC rather than get a XB1and they'll still be buying Xbox games and contributing to the Xbox ecosystem
- Ill will generated by the shift in MS priotitieswhat Ill will? If customer needs are being met, what is their to be ill will about? For most of MS customers it will be just another day. Again there's no shift in priorities there is just the addition of a new initiative.
Again, you're circling back to a point that is not mine. My actual point is that MS is opting for the extra money from selling the games on PC over the potential revenue generated by the XB1 sales they may lose. The lose in future XB1 sales is broader than you specific example and you insist that is the only demographic they will lose. There is a term for that sort of debating, straw manning. You can't address the broader point so you make up a easier point for you to talk about. Usually a sign your point may be weaker than you suspect.
The funny thing is, you are the one failing to see the broader point. You are making assumption about the buying tendencies of both PC enthusiasts and console enthusiasts that simply aren't true in any capacity.
You are spouting nonsense about how serving PC enthusiasts on their hardware of choice will negatively impact MS's licensing revenue.
You are spouting nonsense about why people who prefer consoles actually prefer consoles.
You are spouting nonsense suggesting that MS is shifting focus away from console even though all signs point to them adding-on to the potential consumers base, not trading.
vcc said:
As I stated, there is no methodology or details about how the data was derived and it all seems rather high. You also can't 'pick through the missing information in the graphic'. You can note it but what are you picking through if it's missing? The rest of that paragraph is you circling back to the argument you think you could win which is not one we're talking about.
Smh man, your the analyst. And you took an graph that is obviously lacking the detail to support your opinion, and suggested that it supports your opinion. In doing so, you showed a massive lack of understanding of he gaming market.
vcc said:
The actual argument is MS has made the value proposition worse for the machine itself; which is lower their sales int he future. Making this move is a sign their priorities have shifted. My interpretation is a XB2 (XB10) won't happen. They may opt to make a successor but not one competing for the traditional game market. As I also said to others, they will try to compete with Apple/Google not Sony/Nintendo.
No the actually argument is about the effect that this revelation has on Xbox owners. Choosing not to try to push console sales onto gamers who prefer to play PCs and instead attempting to meet them where they live, does not indicate a shift away from consoles altogether... Not to a reasonable person. Priorities haven't 'shifted'. Their strategy has expanded: there is no indication that they value the selling games to the PC market OVER selling games, services, and collecting licensing revenues from the console market. No idication whatsoever.
vcc said:
As I noted above in fact it does for the reasons I noted. I have a feeling you're going to circle back again because you're just that sort of person.
Yeah I'm the one circling.
And the irony of it all is that the next Xbox console will essentially be a PC that is 'easy to set up'