lunchwithyuzo
Banned
I think it's cyclical too. Nintencats could be much more of a legitimate system seller for a $150 system versus a $250 system. It might not be necessarily that there'd be more casual 3DS owners who'd then decide to buy the game, but instead the game would sell more casual gamers on the system at that pricepoint.Father_Brain said:I generally don't agree with the notion that 3DS' current fortunes have more to do with its price point than its software lineup, but I think it's reasonable to suggest that a high hardware price impacts sales of some kinds of software more than others, and the most casual software is probably the most substantially harmed.
Honestly, I just don't think you can reach a massmarket audience with a dedicated games handheld above $200. That might work for consoles, but people have different standards and expectations for handhelds. Even at $199, I think you'd see a lot more mainstream interest in 3DS generally.
PSP also has a ton of sub-$10 games in budget and bargain bins all over. While PSP software beat 3DS in raw numbers, it might actually have not in dollars.lawblob said:Oh, ok. I misunderstood.
That's still pretty damn crazy. A brand new system should have, I would think, a much more software hungry install base than for a 6 year old, pirate-riddled machine. But still, I guess there are a helluva lot of PSPs still out in the wild.