Arstechnica: Don’t read too much into the PS4’s million day-one sales

Speevy

Banned
Any console that has sold a million is going to get developers talking.

It's going to make for a nice conference next year.

It's a kind of security blanket. ALREADY at a million. Didn't have to struggle through February to reach it.

With that said, it doesn't mean much at this point vs. the Xbone.
 

jaaz

Member
One of the Ars staff is not happy with the opinions we're posing on their opinion article

IKEN4j4.png

That has to be one of the most unprofessional tweets I have ever seen. What has happened to this "profession"?
 

Jabba

Banned
To the mass consumer? It doesn't. Why do you think it's taking so long for everyone to adopt HDTVs? Blu-Rays over DVD?

Hardcore gamers? Sure, it matters. But guess what? They are in the minority. They don't matter in the grand scheme of things. If they did and if it truly mattered everyone would just buy a PC and a korean IPS monitor.

Early adopters spread word of mouth. Surely you posting on GAF, could I assume you're up on your tech? If so, do your less informed friends ask you about tech?

Not aimed at you, journalists need to stop saying GAF doesn't matter. GAF as a whole matters, the opinions on GAF vary greatly despite outside and some inside beliefs. GAF has at least one idiot such as myself. GAF helps shape opinions on games and game related tech. It breaks news and helps compliment gaming news sites for many.

Not many are saying fellate PS4, they are saying GIVE THE FUCKING SYSTEM IT'S KUDOS. They're also saying POINT OUT IT'S WEAK POINTS so I can be better informed. Downplaying the power and then saying it's about the games is NOT the whole truth when it comes to what can/can't be provided. Such a power disparity can make a difference in content, that is a fact in the matter.

As someone else asked, why are they trying to temper enthusiasm? If X1 sells more in 24 hours will we get more tempered enthusiasm? They should be writing how the next gen has an enthusiastic start in PS4 and hope there's as much to write about in the coming X1 launch, while at the same time being cautious.

I don't think conspiracies but Western xenophobia may play a small subtle part in tempered enthusiasm towards PS4 with SOME journalists.
 
So this entire article centers around "What if"s?

What if Nintendo had more Wii's stocked? What if the PS4 has nothing to play in April/Holiday 2014? Well they didn't & no one knows including the author.

How does the idea for this article get passed at the writers table? Laughable. As for the PS4 it's still missing a lot of important features to be patched at a later date & their spring/14 lineup doesn't look bad at all so that's not a hard call to make - assuming these launch issues don't last.

Stupid article.
 

Codeblew

Member
Wow. Never reading Ars again.

The article itself doesn't bother me, it's the way Aurich and Lee are just openly name-calling their readership on Twitter. I don't want to give ad revenue to these clowns anymore.

Yeah, I just deleted my bookmarks.
 

UberTag

Member
Imagine the craziness of GAF/News sites if the Xbox one sells less on launch day worldwide to PS4 NA launch.
We're either going to get an inflated "shipped/sold to retailers" count metric.
A skewed "worldwide sales vs. North American sales" metric.
A dollar value metric which factors in the $599 launch price in addition to the cost of LIVE - i.e. "the Xbox One launch grossed more revenue in a 24-hour period than any console launch in history".
Or if things go really south a "combined Xbox hardware" metric (which also includes X360 sales).

It'll be more than a million in the first 24 hours, though. That much is for certain.
 

vcc

Member
Well if that's true, then that's that. I believe my point above still stands; whatever ceiling these new consoles could possibly have for the first 24 hours, MS and Sony don't have enough consoles to meet it.

The counterpoint in the PS3 shipped a lot more units than were sold through day one or even in the first month. Sony saved face by quoting the units shipped for several months until they had a uptick in demand a bit later.

Demand and supply has to be there.
 

ypo

Member
It's ok guys, don't read too much into it. Just the little simple fact that it's the fastest selling console in history at launch. It's ok. that small fact is all you are going to get.
 

GhaleonEB

Member
If the PS2 had 1 million units available at launch it would have sold them. Dreamcast had the record for most sold in the first month at the time and still went out of business in two years. Things can change.

I have done the opposite, and I've been struggling to comprehend how Sony's sale numbers are so high.

Has the console market spontaneously grown? The more I think about it, the more I think that Sony has just taken the lions share of market share. Nintendo's launch has almost no impact on sales, and Microsoft's Xbox One doesn't seem like it will be a ground shaker.

It'll be interesting to see how the XBONE sells.
There have been a lot of posts like this, so I'm quoting you two as representative rather than to single you two out.

I've read most (but not all) pages of the thread, and a few articles on the 1m sales number, but most seem to be missing what I think is the real story. It's pretty weak reasoning to dismiss the launch sales with arguments as Ars presented: "if the other systems had as many units on sale, they'd have sold as many", or something like that. The real story was the supply, not the demand.

The question to ask is, why didn't any previous console launch have enough units on sale, if that demand was there? You gotta both drive up demand and have units to sell. Why is it that only Sony was able to crank out this many for their launch?

Console launches are massive, years in the making logistical challenges. I'd love some journalist to ask the question, "Why was Sony able to have over one million PS4's available for sale in North American day 1, when no other system could pull it off, despite supposedly having the demand?" And then follow that thought through. What about the PS4's design enabled it to be manufactured more easily than prior consoles? How did Sony overcome supply line bottlenecks? What are the logistical challenges in getting that many units into the channel so fast? What were the specific lessons Sony learned from the launch of prior Playstations that enabled them to achieve this result? (We can surmise some of the answers on our own, of course.)

How did Sony pull this off when no one else ever has, if prior launches had enough demand? That's the real story here and Ars missed it entirely. The author would do readers a greater service to dig into that question and do a little journalism rather than just dismiss the impressive launch numbers with "well the other guys had lots of demand too" stories. But that's harder, of course.
 

GorillaJu

Member
They're correct. The battle starts here, for Sony. Certainly these first day sales are impressive, but it's a long road with consoles and things can change drastically as time goes
 
The conclusion that the proverbial race isn't over is a valid one, but it's like a response to something that very few people have even vocalized---very few considered the million sold to be an indisputable proof that Sony will "win" in the long run, just that it was a very successful start, and a possible indicator of future success.

That's why the article feels strange to me---it's like an athlete has a great first half of a game and someone blurts out "But that doesn't mean they'll win the whole series" when few have even made that assertion---mildly reeking of either bitterness or an attempt to rabble-rouse.
This would've been close to my initial reaction if it hadn't been for those two Ars people throwing a public tantrum and insulting their audience.
 
Sure they do and the offended have the right to bring their business elsewhere. Since I don't respond with hateful accusatory remarks to articles it doesn't bother me.

Bullshit. But of course you'd think so. Feel free to try that in the real world sometime.
 
They're correct. The battle starts here, for Sony. Certainly these first day sales are impressive, but it's a long road with consoles and things can change drastically as time goes

You see how you were able to suss all that out? You didn't need an article to tell you that..this was click bait from the jump.
 
Difference between the Wii U and PS4 is the Wii U has almost NOTHING until Pikmin 3. They had Lego City Undercover and that was about it. 3rd party support for next gen consoles doesn't look great early next year but Sony arguably has their biggest game in March. After that it could be trouble depending on when The Order: 1886 comes out and what comes out of Japan.
 

Klocker

Member
The sales numbers tell me that people were sick and tired after 8 long years of last gen gaming, ready for new.

In about 18 mos we will know what both consoles sales numbers mean.

Don't get why Ars can not have an opinion here but everyone else can?
 

InSpectre

Member
I wonder at what point Ars starts "reading into it."

When 2.5 million PS4s are sold by Nov. 30 across all regions?
When 3.5 million are sold by the end of the calendar year?
When 5.5 million are sold by then end of the fiscal year March 31st 2014?

I wouldn't read to much into anything Ars says these days.
 
So what they are saying is the xbox one can make a comeback like the ps3...and resolution doesn't matter.

Why do we care? A good start is a good start. The better your initial figures the more support you get from third parties... The more money your first party makes. This is a great thing and will impact the future.. But only to a degree.
 

Yjynx

Member
There have been a lot of posts like this, so I'm quoting you two as representative rather than to single you two out.

I've read most (but not all) pages of the thread, and a few articles on the 1m sales number, but most seem to be missing what I think is the real story. It's pretty weak reasoning to dismiss the launch sales with arguments as Ars presented: "if the other systems had as many units on sale, they'd have sold as many", or something like that. The real story was the supply, not the demand.

The question to ask is, why didn't any previous console launch have enough units on sale, if that demand was there? You gotta both drive up demand and have units to sell. Why is it that only Sony was able to crank out this many for their launch?

Console launches are massive, years in the making logistical challenges. I'd love some journalist to ask the question, "Why was Sony able to have over one million PS4's available for sale in North American day 1, when no other system could pull it off, despite supposedly having the demand?" And then follow that thought through. What about the PS4's design enabled it to be manufactured more easily than prior consoles? How did Sony overcome supply line bottlenecks? What are the logistical challenges in getting that many units into the channel so fast? What were the specific lessons Sony learned from the launch of prior Playstations that enabled them to achieve this result? (We can surmise some of the answers on our own, of course.)

How did Sony pull this off when no one else ever has, if prior launches had enough demand? That's the real story here and Ars missed it entirely. The author would do readers a greater service to dig into that question and do a little journalism rather than just dismiss the impressive launch numbers with "well the other guys had lots of demand too" stories. But that's harder, of course.

This right here.
 

~~Hasan~~

Junior Member
While there's a difference between a "professional" writer and an anonymous guy an a message board, the use of retard as an insult is always in poor form.
Hahaha professional. You are telling me that dude who is expressing his bias. Downplaying big numbers. Calling us retards. Saying no diff between 720p and 1080p is professional?

Hahahahahaha
 

unbias

Member
Maybe because every other news outlet is saying that and they wanted to run it through a different light? A light that causes the likes of you (maybe not you specifically) to go bonkers and give them more views?

Really, an unsettling number of you guys are overreacting to this article. It's pretty sad.

I'll just post what I said earlier:

The article itself if fine... I mean, nothing really ground breaking but whatever. The only problem I have is, what is the point? Is there a story here? If so I'm not seeing it. He addressed nobody specifically or a group(or other outlets), and the article itself serves no purpose other then to inform people the PS4 isn't guaranteed to be the highest selling console of the new generation(which again, why do you want to make this so clear to your audience?).

I guess I just dont get the point of the article in terms of why he thought this was a story... As someone who isnt buying a console at launch but sitting back and waiting, I dont understand how(or who) this helps me or consumers or his readers at all. It isn't even entertaining beyond giving a perception of an ulterior motive.

BTW, what is your definition of overreacting(give examples) and how many in this thread are doing it for it to be "unsettling"?
 
Ars has lost credibility in my eyes due to their behavior in the past, including "mistakenly" reporting that the PS4 draws 80w on standby just a few days ago.

Now that I see how they like to also insult their readers, I think I will keep away from them going forward.
 

RocBase

Member
Well I can't say I don't agree with the article to an extent. Selling 1 million in a mere 24 hours is a great feat and deserves to be applauded, but what would be interesting (and more telling to this "console gaming is dead!!!" myth) is to see how those numbers hold up in the coming years.

Having said that, I personally don't think the PS4 will have nearly as much trouble as Nintendo is having with the WiiU, as their problem goes beyond just games. The PS4 is backed by unwavering dev support and several enough blockbuster franchises – multiplatform or not – to keep the interest afloat.
 

Mxrz

Member
In a world where people would kill to have their job, or any job, the writers at Arstechnica get off on calling readers retarded on twitter. Good to know.
 
The sales numbers tell me that people were sick and tired after 8 long years of last gen gaming, ready for new.

In about 18 mos we will know what both consoles sales numbers mean.

Don't get why Ars can not have an opinion here but everyone else can?

I'm not sure where people said that they're not allowed their opinion.

I think what most people are saying that it's strange that they took the news of PS4 selling one million systems and instead of noting this they use it to attempt to counter an assertion basically no one has made.

This is not in a vacuum, either. The pervasive sense has been that journalists throughout the enthusiast press have attempted to downplay any advantage that Sony might have---and this article, seemingly attempting to neuter good news, only helps to feed that perception.
 
Are you taking offense to the article's accuracy? Or the fact that it merely exists as it is?

there's no accuracy to speak of, its a fluff piece, the fact it exists in place of pointing out that it was a record breaking launch and leaving it at that, is head scratching..its like saying the first round of a boxing match doesn't decide the rest of the match because one contender threw a punch that connected..
 

Corto

Member
There have been a lot of posts like this, so I'm quoting you two as representative rather than to single you two out.

I've read most (but not all) pages of the thread, and a few articles on the 1m sales number, but most seem to be missing what I think is the real story. It's pretty weak reasoning to dismiss the launch sales with arguments as Ars presented: "if the other systems had as many units on sale, they'd have sold as many", or something like that. The real story was the supply, not the demand.

The question to ask is, why didn't any previous console launch have enough units on sale, if that demand was there? You gotta both drive up demand and have units to sell. Why is it that only Sony was able to crank out this many for their launch?

Console launches are massive, years in the making logistical challenges. I'd love some journalist to ask the question, "Why was Sony able to have over one million PS4's available for sale in North American day 1, when no other system could pull it off, despite supposedly having the demand?" And then follow that thought through. What about the PS4's design enabled it to be manufactured more easily than prior consoles? How did Sony overcome supply line bottlenecks? What are the logistical challenges in getting that many units into the channel so fast? What were the specific lessons Sony learned from the launch of prior Playstations that enabled them to achieve this result? (We can surmise some of the answers on our own, of course.)

How did Sony pull this off when no one else ever has, if prior launches had enough demand? That's the real story here and Ars missed it entirely. The author would do readers a greater service to dig into that question and do a little journalism rather than just dismiss the impressive launch numbers with "well the other guys had lots of demand too" stories. But that's harder, of course.

Too much work for too few clicks.
 

Shosai

Banned
there's no accuracy to speak of, its a fluff piece, the fact it exists in place of pointing out that it was a record breaking launch and leaving it at that, is head scratching..its like saying the first round of a boxing match doesn't decide the rest of the match because one contender threw a punch that connected..

But your allegory is another example of an accurate report. I'm not getting your issue here.

EDIT:

There have been a lot of posts like this, so I'm quoting you two as representative rather than to single you two out.

I've read most (but not all) pages of the thread, and a few articles on the 1m sales number, but most seem to be missing what I think is the real story. It's pretty weak reasoning to dismiss the launch sales with arguments as Ars presented: "if the other systems had as many units on sale, they'd have sold as many", or something like that. The real story was the supply, not the demand.

The question to ask is, why didn't any previous console launch have enough units on sale, if that demand was there? You gotta both drive up demand and have units to sell. Why is it that only Sony was able to crank out this many for their launch?

Console launches are massive, years in the making logistical challenges. I'd love some journalist to ask the question, "Why was Sony able to have over one million PS4's available for sale in North American day 1, when no other system could pull it off, despite supposedly having the demand?" And then follow that thought through. What about the PS4's design enabled it to be manufactured more easily than prior consoles? How did Sony overcome supply line bottlenecks? What are the logistical challenges in getting that many units into the channel so fast? What were the specific lessons Sony learned from the launch of prior Playstations that enabled them to achieve this result? (We can surmise some of the answers on our own, of course.)

How did Sony pull this off when no one else ever has, if prior launches had enough demand? That's the real story here and Ars missed it entirely. The author would do readers a greater service to dig into that question and do a little journalism rather than just dismiss the impressive launch numbers with "well the other guys had lots of demand too" stories. But that's harder, of course.

Alright, this clears things up. The article's problem was that it wasn't an exercise in flattery for Sony.

Tell me, how many times have you read stories about record breaking launch-day sales, and asked yourself "Why was Activision able to sell 7.5 million of copies of Call of Duty in one day? How did they pull this off when no one else ever has?. What great things did they accomplish to make this possible, and where is the investigative journalism uncovering it?"

Exactly zero? It's a strangely uncommon reaction to a standard launch-day reporting piece.
 
Jesus Christ. Anyone says one bad thing about the PS4 and people reach for their pitchforks.

What they are trying to say is that even if Sony had, say, 4 million consoles out there, and they all sold, that doesn't mean it will prove to be a successful console. All the consoles he sourced sold out, but not all proved to be as successful as others that sold the same or even less.

At least read the damn thing before critiquing it people.
 
"Don't read too much onto this" says the guy who writes a 1500 word article that includes extrapolating non-existent sales from previous consoles.

Forget the fact that they are apples to oranges comparisons in regards to the state of the company, its supply chains, developer relations, and financial standing.

I haven't read such a shit half-ass article like that in a while. That piece done STUNK.
 

Skeff

Member
Jesus Christ. Anyone says one bad thing about the PS4 and people reach for their pitchforks.

What they are trying to say is that even if Sony had, say, 4 million consoles out there, and they all sold, that doesn't mean it will prove to be a successful console. All the consoles he sourced sold out, but not all proved to be as successful as others that sold the same or even less.

At least read the damn thing before critiquing it people.

At least read the thread before critiquing it.
 

Nerokis

Member
How about this...

Sony did very well for its launch day. What is so hard in saying that. Why downplay the success of something by comparing it to other consoles in a negative light? No one is saying the PS4 is winning, and the XBox is dead. That wasn't even a discussion, but bringing this up as if this is the overall picture for the future is ridiculous. Where was articles like this when the 360 was deemed the best despite the PS3 not even released yet or even priced? Or what about the Wii? Like it's unnecessary and uncalled for. Sony finally... Like FINALLY has everything right for once. Just give it to them. It doesn't have to be praise, you can compare it to other launches as well but just hand it to them. They came from the grave and the shameful ps3 launch to now making history in the NA.. A market they would have never if we were to guess this back in 08. Just give it to them. It's not that hard... It really isn't.

lol. "Great job, Sony. You nailed it!" Compelling article, right? In my eyes, the number in and of itself warrants further research, precisely because it's very impressive. And yes, there's more than enough discussion and excitement surrounding the number to warrant such an article, as well. The existence or non-existence of a "PS4 is winning, X1 is dead" narrative is almost irrelevant, because it's incredibly easy to justify an article that places launch day sales numbers into the context of past sales trends. Seriously, you and many others here seem very, very oversensitive to additional context and an absence of jubilance, as if anything that doesn't simply reinforce how great this or that news is for Sony is by default "downplaying," and therefore offensive.

I don't get it. The article acknowledges at least a few times that Sony broke records here, that the PS4 has officially eclipsed other consoles in terms of launch day sales. It's absolutely worth looking at this data point with a critical eye, though, even if it seems many people apparently only care for it as fodder for a Sony feel good story/smiling Kaz GIFs/whatever.

There have been a lot of posts like this, so I'm quoting you two as representative rather than to single you two out.

I've read most (but not all) pages of the thread, and a few articles on the 1m sales number, but most seem to be missing what I think is the real story. It's pretty weak reasoning to dismiss the launch sales with arguments as Ars presented: "if the other systems had as many units on sale, they'd have sold as many", or something like that. The real story was the supply, not the demand.

The question to ask is, why didn't any previous console launch have enough units on sale, if that demand was there? You gotta both drive up demand and have units to sell. Why is it that only Sony was able to crank out this many for their launch?
.
How did Sony pull this off when no one else ever has, if prior launches had enough demand? That's the real story here and Ars missed it entirely. The author would do readers a greater service to dig into that question and do a little journalism rather than just dismiss the impressive launch numbers with "well the other guys had lots of demand too" stories. But that's harder, of course.

I completely agree with you. There was certainly nothing ambitious about this particular article, and yes, I'd love to see a break down of what, exactly, was different this time. Actually, aside from the lack of ambition, there was nothing particularly insightful about this article, either: the observation made here was of the low hanging fruit variety, and the headline itself ("Don't read too much...") speaks to an absence of imagination, because there is definitely a real story there, and you touched upon it.

The thing is, this article pretty obviously had a limited scope from the outset (giving a bit of context to the PS4 launch day numbers), and seeing as most articles fall under the "limited scope" category, I can hardly summon indignation every time one pops up.
 

KungFucius

King Snowflake
Is there a reason they feel compelled to poo-poo the PS4's launch numbers?

How is this Poo Pooing? It's a reasonable statement. Hardcore gamers are going to buy the PS4. This tells us absolutely nothing about mass market adoption. Is it good? Yes. Does this mean it will stay good? Of course not.
 
Jesus Christ. Anyone says one bad thing about the PS4 and people reach for their pitchforks.

What they are trying to say is that even if Sony had, say, 4 million consoles out there, and they all sold, that doesn't mean it will prove to be a successful console. All the consoles he sourced sold out, but not all proved to be as successful as others that sold the same or even less.

At least read the damn thing before critiquing it people.

And if it bombed, it doesn't mean it will be a fail console in the long run right?

If you can flip this scenario any way you please........why even bother writing a piece on this topic?
 

Curufinwe

Member
Jesus Christ. Anyone says one bad thing about the PS4 and people reach for their pitchforks.

What they are trying to say is that even if Sony had, say, 4 million consoles out there, and they all sold, that doesn't mean it will prove to be a successful console. All the consoles he sourced sold out, but not all proved to be as successful as others that sold the same or even less.

At least read the damn thing before critiquing it people.

We did read it, and it was found wanting.

A console that can sell 4 million units at launch when the price is the highest and the software is the worst it will be in the entire lifetime of the console is a a guaranteed sucess short of thermo-nuclerar war.
 

PSYGN

Member
And if it bombed, it doesn't mean it will be a fail console in the long run right?

If you can flip this scenario any way you please........why even bother writing a piece on this topic?

To get a rise out of people and get more hits. It seems to be working.
 

unbias

Member
http://blog.jeffgerstmann.net/post/67376367489/isnt-the-ps4-selling-more-than-any-other-console-on

Anonymous asked: Isn't the PS4 selling more than any other console on day one more about their production capability and less about consumer response?

Yeah, probably.

I guess Gerstmann is part of the conspiracy as well. After all, he doesn't believe in the power of the consumers either.

That question and his response doesnt make sense in terms of what it is trying to mean. I mean what is the inference here? That there really wasnt as much demand for the console, but since there were so many available it sold? So what, the demand wasn't really there?

That question is so full of nothing it is silly.
 

Kleegamefan

K. LEE GAIDEN
Considering almost every retail source I've had or heard of pegs the distribution at 3 ps4s :1 xb1 or worse I find it unlikely they will ship that many units let alone sell through that many. I think Sony has been producing PS4's for longer than MS has been producing XB1's and had a big upfront shipment, they simply won't have enough no matter what the demand is.


Xbone is launching in 13 countries, for them to do worse than Sony they would have to sell through less than 100,000 Xbones per country..


Its an interesting tactical strategy employed by MS and will, for sure, play into the hands of the anti-PS4 shills and downplayers...

The salt fallout from GAF will be epic once this happens, no doubt :)
 
Still, the PS3 definitely sold out at launch. As I recall, eBay prices for the console in December were in the thousands.

Ebay prices in the thousands? You're thinking of the Wii. The PS3 was a dud on eBay.

It was sold out for a week, maybe two. After that, PS3's were easy to find everywhere.
 

qko

Member
Well I can't say I don't agree with the article to an extent. Selling 1 million in a mere 24 hours is a great feat and deserves to be applauded, but what would be interesting (and more telling to this "console gaming is dead!!!" myth) is to see how those numbers hold up in the coming years.

Having said that, I personally don't think the PS4 will have nearly as much trouble as Nintendo is having with the WiiU, as their problem goes beyond just games. The PS4 is backed by unwavering dev support and several enough blockbuster franchises – multiplatform or not – to keep the interest afloat.

It's getting as much support as the Wii U did it's first 3 months. A lot of games front loaded until March of the next year. February and March of 2013 was supposed to bring Rayman Legends, Monster Hunter 3 Ultimate and Lego City Undercover. There was the occasional indie game brought to the eShop between that period.

March 2014 is supposed to bring Infamous, Drive Club and Watch Dogs. We'll see if those 3 games are console sellers for the PS4. In between its much of the same story, few blockbusters and a lot of indies in between.
 

Shosai

Banned
That question and his response doesnt make sense in terms of what it is trying to mean. I mean what is the inference here? That there really wasnt as much demand for the console, but since there were so many available it sold? So what, the demand wasn't really there?

That question is so full of nothing it is silly.

It's not hard to grasp. The large supply doesn't invalidate or downplay the large demand. He's saying that the PS4 was unique in selling 1 million consoles because they were unique in having 1 million consoles at the ready, and other companies could probably sell a similar amount if they also had the launch-day shipments at the ready.

You're taking way too much offense to this

Ebay prices in the thousands? You're thinking of the Wii. The PS3 was a dud on eBay.

Well then:

http://www.gamespot.com/articles/ps3-ebay-prices-soar/1100-6161967/
http://money.cnn.com/2006/11/22/commentary/column_gaming/index.htm
http://www.foxnews.com/story/2006/11/17/price-playstation-3-tops-2000-on-ebay/
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17938_105-9663795-1.html
 
But your allegory is another example of an accurate report. I'm not getting your issue here.

EDIT:



Alright, this clears things up. The article's problem was that it wasn't an exercise in flattery for Sony.

Tell me, how many times have you read stories about record breaking launch-day sales, and asked yourself "Why was Activision able to sell 7.5 million of copies of Call of Duty in one day? How did they pull this off when no one else ever has?. What great things did they accomplish to make this possible, and where is the investigative journalism uncovering it?"

Exactly zero? It's a strangely uncommon reaction to a standard launch-day reporting piece.


you're poor at being coy, If you need a sports writer to write a 1000+ column telling you that one punch (made blindfolded while facing the opposite direction mind you) doesn't decide an entire match where there are multiple rounds left and both fighters are still standing, you are an idiot. If you can't see why sports writer wasting time to harp on about the obvious, while downplaying a blindfolded opposite facing punch, no one can help you.
 
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