At worst, it's a misunderstanding and a pointless one. The first console manufacturer to come out with $70 price point was SONY. Who cares about the publishers in the scope of this point?
Because platform holders who want to retain optimal relationships with publishers will try to create environments that are suitable for those 3P publishers. Sony values EA & ABK as 3P partners. They wouldn't want them to appear like they're being left out on their own with a bad choice, even if it was financially sound (to their numbers). As a publisher themselves, Sony were also interested in increasing their own profit margins.
Hence the decision to go with $70 games. And yes we can say Microsoft kept 3P considerations of the time in mind themselves with XBO's original DRM plans, but they messed up in way too many other areas to carry that off without backlash by everyone at large. The only people who seemed to have an issue with Sony doing $70 games were "journalists" who are already in MS's pocket one way or another, and diehard Xbox fans who wanted to use it as ammunition against PlayStation.
Oh my bad, you're right. 2 years then. Is it excusable that they skipped a year? Is it enough to simply have State of Plays given what we know Sony has done in the past? 2021's showcase was 42 minutes, barely 12 minutes over what a typical State of Play. Tell me as someone who loves what Sony does, that's good enough for you? It's not good enough for me, sorry. I gave this year's showcase a C...much better than most. Check the thread, review the poll if you wish. I'm saying the new format is trash and has been since 2020. If I had a dollar for everytime I've said something to the effect of "I miss Sony's Showmanship" I'd have a couple of happy meals right now. It's gone...it's no longer personable and I refuse to make excuses for it. Moving on.
No I agree, not having a showcase in 2022 was a mistake on Sony's part. Have said this a few times in the past. And the May showcase was nowhere near enough to make up for that skipped year.
Personally I am not too miffed about the 2021 PS Showcase being 40-so minutes. It's the quality that matters, and that showcase was much better than the much longer one we just had in May. It was also better (IMO) than Xbox's recent showcase, which was about an hour. And I also didn't have an issue with the 2021 Showcase because they had good-to-great State of Play events that same year.
The new format was born somewhat out of necessity, and by extension the events from practically all the big players since 2020 have been disappointing. We aren't getting those epic E3-style presentations back because E3 is dead, people let media influencers and journalists sell them on the idea we don't need E3 anymore, let the big companies sell them on the idea we don't need an E3, and made fun of E3 trying to come back after COVID lockdowns. All so we could get a Summer Games Fest that has to cipher reveals from other certain platform showcases to have a big reveal of its own, and with organizers who still seem disinterested in trying to make it at least something comparable to a digital E3 so it can be better.
The games media? Fuck the media. I'm talking people who matter. People like you, people like me. Final Fantasy...I mean you're going in a whole other direction but sure I'll address it. Final Fantasy is a great game, but it's not Sony's game. For what it's worth I hope it does well. Hell I made an entire thread consider selling my consoles just to get the PS5 for that game. You were fuckin there dude.
The media matters so far that they have the platforms that drive a lot of the discourse online. It's sad, because they suck at being respectable and professional about their job, and a lot of the media actively manufacture & engage in console warring for clicks and views...but we can't pretend they don't exist. Final Fantasy may not be Sony's game, but why does it need to be "owned" by Sony for them to provide it with support like it's a 1P title? Shouldn't them willing to do that for content and creators they don't outright own, be respected in a market where more people seem to think complete ownership is the only option in order to have any unique say in the content that gets made?
VR? Eh don't really care honestly. I don't even know how it's doing. As a consumer I'm not really interested. Here's what I'm saying. The players defend Sony at every turn even though they are getting less than what they used to from them. Sure they may deliver on AAA games and if that's all that matters to you, then I guess you're happy.
Sure, maybe some people in the PS community are doing what you describe, but I can tell you a lot others are not. I've seen more than a few people voice displeasure at a lot of Sony's initiatives the past year or so, and I've been increasingly vocal, myself. Just like how I am with Microsoft and Xbox, and even Nintendo. Because ideally I would like to see all three doing well, but I can't blindly say I want that when certain ones are doing some of the shadiest stuff in a vow of "competition".
I guess from this, you are saying Sony should be doing more 1P AA games? Well, I've been saying that as well! So we can agree there.
What I'm seeing is a step back from traditional showmanship, an audacity to raise prices (Microsoft now doing it too, to be fair, which I also hate), things like upgrading games still meaning folks have to rebuy games, lack of any real communication with the fans outside of this joke of a show this year. You could be fine with this...I've always disliked the format change. There's plenty of improvements Sony could be making and year after year they just, don't. They got the games, but if you think that's all that makes a great platform then I don't even know why I'm responding to this. This is the definition of resting on your laurels. If you think Sony doesn't have to respond, then why aren't you just putting a laugh emoji next to my first post on this topic, calling me a fool and calling it a day.
Here's the thing: I'm not necessarily in support of many of the things you just mentioned. However, I understand the market realities, the specific corporate realities WRT Sony, the audience realities when other platform holders like Nintendo have been doing some of these same things for even longer and get no pushback (well, real pushback) for it, and accept that those are all working concurrently. I accept that Sony have made certain decisions and I can tolerate them, even if I don't personally like them.
And again, with things like the lackluster showcase this year, I agree with you, Sony have to do better there. I think they need to do better in general with talking with the community, and while Microsoft are egregious with it to the point of forming para-social relationships and enabling some of the worst toxicity in gaming...they do communicate with their audience in a way at least on some level, Sony should probably be doing. And, they did in the past, with stuff like PlayStation Experience, but they've since stopped.
Sony need to rectify that, maybe they should also start up a weekly podcast and even get some legit PS figures in the community like Mystic as one of the hosts, answer viewer questions and stuff like that. FWIW I think Sony are doing a good job with the competitive tournaments that are community-centric, but some stuff outside the competitive gaming space would probably be good, too. And hell, maybe also partner with PlayStation fan websites and podcast, etc.
Bring Kevin Butler back while at it, he can be the public-facing community mascot. I loved those ads with them in the PS3 gen.
No, that would also be resting on their laurels. I mean I've already brainstormed who Sony could buy, in this very thread. So no, you're wrong about me.
Fair enough.
I've been okay with Sony or Microsoft buying studios. I specifically did not want THIS acquisition to go through. This was a step too far and disrupts the industry in a way that essentially sparks an arms war. One that if Microsoft wants, they could win handily.
Can agree with this, and that has also been a concern of mine. Additional concerns being, it sets up a blueprint for other companies with way smaller shares in gaming than Microsoft (but potentially just as big or even bigger than them) to buy up big 3P publishers and use MS's blueprint for a path to (lesser) resistance.
I'm searching for some semblance of an ebb and flow. Some kind of balance if you will. I want Sony and Microsoft going blow for blow, not one blowing out the other until they destroy one another.
In theory I understand what you mean but in practice this is not actually competition. Sometimes the result of genuine competition is one of the competitors gets blown out by their opponent. That's what has been happening to Microsoft for several years now, and I don't think Sony should 'dumb down' their competitive approach just so companies like Microsoft can appear like they're more competitive.
But, it's okay, Sony won't have to. Certain regulators and judges are dumbed down enough about the gaming market to let companies like Microsoft buy their way to being "competitive", instead :/
I think this scenario would best in the end for consumers like myself. That's why I felt Matt Booty's email was dangerous. That why seeing the unredacted list of studios Microsoft was looking at is daunting. I hoped that if the deal fell through that it would be reason to give Microsoft some pause. The whole ordeal still might, we'll have to see.
Well, I don't necessarily think Microsoft have any further roadblocks left to cross for this deal, TBH. Maybe they miss closing by the 18th by a hair, but given recent developments, I doubt ABK's board & shareholders will want to poison the well asking for a significantly higher premium on the stock. And a $68.7 billion payout looks better to their pockets than a $3 billion one.
Look, I'm going to apologize for maybe responding to your other post too brashly. Needless to say it's been a tumultuous day and, I would say, not necessarily in a good way. It's been increasingly difficult for me to parse who's actually upset about this deal for the right reasons, for the wrong reason, and same for those who are cheering it on (though in that case, I would say there are few if any 'right' reasons to cheer for this deal). Some posts have started to blur in my trying to read through everything, so I'll probably take a break from the thread for a while unless some other massive development takes place. Though, I'll still be reading through posts as usual.
So yeah, I'm sorry if my other post came off the wrong way, and that I've seemingly misinterpreted your POV in what I was replying to. I can see now that you have justified concerns, and we see eye-to-eye on a lot of these points of concern. As for what Sony does to account for these developments, that is anyone's guess. But at the end of the day, it's their business, and their market to lose.
I just hope they make the right decisions going forward. That's all any of us can really hope for.
They would be dumb to do that and incur litigation and more heavy fines and massive public PR headache.
I don't think that would be the case. Like I said, regulators don't care about partial foreclosure with console. It's not like Microsoft have promised that COD on non-Xbox consoles would have full parity, because it was Phil Spencer saying it, and his statements can't be used to bind Microsoft as a corporation to.
Phil can say the games will be full parity in a court hearing (not even a trial), but that doesn't mean
Microsoft said it. And since there are regulators who already see no problem with partial foreclosure of COD content on console, since so much of the media are already on their side,
AND they already have so many gamers willing to defend anything they do...I don't think Microsoft would see any long-term or major blowback in partial foreclosure of COD content.
Especially if they wrap it in some pseudo-"pro consumer" move :/