MikeE21286
Member
I have a really bad feeling about next gen. Someone tell me I'm overreacting and the industry will be fine.
Consoles become AAA-only machines and game prices skyrocket.
I have a really bad feeling about next gen. Someone tell me I'm overreacting and the industry will be fine.
For people placing this solely on the economy, one word: ipad. Look at its sales. It's not affecting everything.
I have a really bad feeling about next gen. Someone tell me I'm overreacting and the industry will be fine.
Their faces when they find out that digital won't save them as they continue to leave their current bad development practices and poor production strategies unfixed.I expect next gen to focus on ~30-40 franchises that sell 3+ million copies, and everything else is digital.
I'm guessing their next gen plans are mostly set in place at this point. Doubtful they can rush things enough to launch with the Wii U and the last thing either MS/Sony wants to do is to botch their launch while the other hits it out of the park.Good, maybe this will make MS and Sony bring out new consoles sooner, rather than later.
I'm not surprised at all with the hardware, just how barren the software schedule has been. Publishers keep releasing games in deadlock with one another but then don't capitalize when there is room. Spring has been great this gen prior to this year.I think people largely are overreacting to these numbers.
I'm curious as to what Wii U doing well or doing poorly means at this point. Do Microsoft and Sony see Wii doing poorly and think it is time to strike and move the development footprint up to current (PC hardware) standards? Or do they use it as a reason to wait until 2014?I would hold back gloom and doom until we see how Wii U does.
Consoles become AAA-only machines and game prices skyrocket.
It is a lack of interest, we needed a new console generation last year.
It's looking bad, especially if both Sony and Microsoft release similar, but more powerful, consoles to what is already offered. Also, I'm starting to get the feeling that the Kinect-craze is dying now. I'm thinking a lot of people are being burned by shitty software (Star Wars being a recent big one).
I think WiiU will do well out the gate, a lot of things are lining up for them. Generation fatigue, shitty fall, only hot new gaming item on the verizon, and big titles at launch. But early next year is the big question mark; I seriously doubt it will still be setting the market on fire (like Wii did) by then.
I think people asking for next gen systems to improve sales are not looking at the reality of the situation. The economy is bad, people don't have jobs, therefore they dont have money to spend on a 360, PS3, Wii, 3DS, or Vita. I can't imagine people will be down to plunk 500, 600, 700 dollars on a new machine.
Why are people blaming the economy? The economy is doing a lot better in 2012 than it was in 2008-2010. And not to mention this wouldn't explain stuff like iPad selling record breaking amounts (for comparison iPad averages 4-5 million a month).
I think people asking for next gen systems to improve sales are not looking at the reality of the situation. The economy is bad, people don't have jobs, therefore they dont have money to spend on a 360, PS3, Wii, 3DS, or Vita. I can't imagine people will be down to plunk 500, 600, 700 dollars on a new machine.
iPad is seen as a device that can do a lot more than the current gaming consoles, it's portable and to be quite honest... it's a status symbol right now.
I have a really bad feeling about next gen. Someone tell me I'm overreacting and the industry will be fine.
People who say "It's not the economy, look at Apple" do not fully grasp the concept of 'disposable income.' These are luxury items. The economy is a huge factor; people have less money to spend on luxury, so therefor they have less choice in how to spend their disposable cash. Consumers simply feel that the iPad provides more value for their money than owning an iPad AND gaming. If things were better, you'd buy more. It's not like you'd buy nothing at all.
I think people asking for next gen systems to improve sales are not looking at the reality of the situation. The economy is bad, people don't have jobs, therefore they dont have money to spend on a 360, PS3, Wii, 3DS, or Vita. I can't imagine people will be down to plunk 500, 600, 700 dollars on a new machine.
"Mommy I want a DS"
Mommy proceeds to buy cheapest DS in the store.
iPad is seen as a device that can do a lot more than the current gaming consoles, it's portable and to be quite honest... it's a status symbol right now.
I don't buy that as the sole reason. The ipad is the elephant in the room the industry wants to ignore. The era of people paying 60 dollars for middling software is over. Yet the big 3 continue to base their entire business around it. And then the complain about the economy to explain terrible hardware sales (when the alternative hardware is flying off shelves, in the same economy, with a substantially higher price tag).
Given the branding difficulties Nintendo has faced with 3DS, it's astounding to me that they're calling their next console WiiU.
The economy was much worse in 2008-2010 and sales were record breaking month after month.
For the bang they offer videogames are a cheap entertainment option.
The US economy is built upon credit card transactions. I.e. paying with money you don't have yet. And bad economies have never influenced the entertainment industry, actually it's the other way around. The worse it gets, the more people want to be distracted by fun and pleasures.
Of course hardware sales go down seven years into the generation without any price cuts. And software sales aren't bad. We're in the middle of a big shift towards digital distribution and that simply isn't tracked by NPD. If the few numbers we do get from time to time are any indication the digital revenue more than makes up for what retail loses. We've had almost 2 million copies of Minecraft in May on 360. That's 40 million revenue. Times change, the industry as such is very healthy.
Max Payne doing so little is the sign of times changing. Not even the Rockstar hype train is working.
Lack of a "Wii Sports" may be what harms WiiU's ability to sustain launch momentum. Nintendo Land is being treated as a "Let's Play" game which is meant to introduce people to the platform concept. But Wii Sports was more than an introductory demo package. It was a real game that had lasting value for the audience it was aimed at. It kept the hype and word of mouth going.
If they don't show up with something akin to that, I'd suspect that's where the trouble will lay.
I'd throw in the shit-tastic trend of retailer specific in-game preorder content, unending DLC, limited edition in-game content, etc. Honestly, large numbers of people are just getting more and more turned off by the idea of plunking down $60 only to feel as though you're only getting half a game.I don't think you are. We're finally feeling the effects of a shit economy, the death of the mid-tier developer, high game prices, lack of excitement as this gen wears on, and dearth of original content. None of these are going to get better next-gen.
The amount of money they spent on advertising really didn't translate to many sales...
I really hate these low handheld numbers , I don't want a touchscreen only future.
A $400 box that plays the exact same games isn't a magical solution.
This year has also been sparse in big games. Diablo 3, Max Payne, Mass Effect and lol Raccoon City were the biggest so far.
I don't disagree with this but my question is whose to say that new hardware from MS and Sony would revive the market. We've seen the launch of two handholds and both have seen and continue to have rough times or sell below expectations. One can blame the lack of software, but as others have said, we are living in the age were money is tighter, and people instead of jumping to video game specific consoles or handhelds are going to Ipads and the like.
At my local Future Shop store,during the d3 and Max Payne 3 launch, clerk asked if anybody was here to pickup Max Payne 3, which was answered by laughs.
I wonder if L.A. Noire harmed the Rockstar brand a little.
The DS didn't explode until 2006, and it launched in 2004. People expecting a new platform to suddenly start breaking records, when the games industry tends to follow a cycle, is a bit weird. Software is a major force in hardware sales, and a new platform is always starting at square one. In time, I'm sure Vita and 3DS sales will pick up noticeably, but what both need are software to do it. Nintendo may have franchises that easily put it above the Vita, but the games we're getting this year are not their driving forces for hardware sales, outside of NSMB2. The Vita's in a much worse position as I see nothing for the rest of this year to change its course.
iPad is seen as a device that can do a lot more than the current gaming consoles, it's portable and to be quite honest... it's a status symbol right now.
I wonder if L.A. Noire harmed the Rockstar brand a little.
I wonder if L.A. Noire harmed the Rockstar brand a little.
For people placing this solely on the economy, one word: ipad. Look at its sales. It's not affecting everything.
Not if the handheld game is worth a shit. It might have made sense to have cheap handheld games in the DS, GBA, and GB days (which they never were cheap) when development costs to make those shit looking games was cheap. PSP, 3DS and especially Vita games take an actual budget.40$ games for handheld game is the first thing which needs to change