Road said:Obligatory Japan + US, Jan + Feb:
WII: 940k = 166k + 774k
360: 938k = 22k + 916k
PS3: 911k = 241k + 670k
Japan + US, 2010
360: 6969061
PS3: 5843825
Holiday in the US is where the 360 increases its lead.
Road said:Obligatory Japan + US, Jan + Feb:
WII: 940k = 166k + 774k
360: 938k = 22k + 916k
PS3: 911k = 241k + 670k
wienke said:I bought 4 PS2s because they kept breaking also but sure that's the only reason PS2 did so well last generation.
My 360 broke so I bought a PS3 slim (coming bundled with a 46" TV didn't hurt either). I think it's silly to suggest that 360 sales are so high because people are replacing their old consoles. If anything, I would think that would give people a reason and an opportunity to buy the PS3 because they're tired of their 360s breaking.
Basically I think it could be a wash either way. Any increase of 360 sales may be offset by people switching to PS3s instead.
Stephen Colbert said:Once we have updated figures, we can sort this out. But so far the gap has continuously narrowed in every release of wodwide numbers. So any idiotic claims people posted here that the PS3 is getting destroyed are baseless. The two are pretty much neck and neck worldwide.
Not if they already had tons of 360 games.wienke said:I bought 4 PS2s because they kept breaking also but sure that's the only reason PS2 did so well last generation.
My 360 broke so I bought a PS3 slim (coming bundled with a 46" TV didn't hurt either). I think it's silly to suggest that 360 sales are so high because people are replacing their old consoles. If anything, I would think that would give people a reason and an opportunity to buy the PS3 because they're tired of their 360s breaking.
Basically I think it could be a wash either way. Any increase of 360 sales may be offset by people switching to PS3s instead.
Stoffinator said:Sadly many would not go to the other side and keep buying the system that keeps breaking on them. I know many who have done this since they got their system on launch day.
V_Arnold said:No, the gap has been 6-4 million for quite some time now.
No and more no. The only reliable worldwide sales figures are Sony's and Microsoft's own shipment figures and they both show that for all but one year in 2008 when it was a virtual tie the ps3 has been consistantly catching up to the 360 worldwide.Watchtower said:Fact is over the past year the gap has kind of stagnated
Opiate said:It's not sudden, this discussion has a long history here at GAF. First, I am not suggesting that this argument is completely without merit: obviously the RRoD is/was a serious issue affecting millions of users. What I would say is this:
1) The PS3 is also not very reliable. Not 360-failure levels, but still well below historical standards for console hardware.
2) Some 360 users likely bought Wiis, PS3s, PCs, or some other hardware.
3) If the 360 is as massively failing as you suggest, let's consider what this means for 360 software. The 360 already has an incredible attach rate. If we assume that, say, 15-25% of these are repeat customers (Numbers I'm guessing at based on your implication that failure rates are massive), what does that do the attach rate? The already fantastic attach rate becomes way better than any other attach rate in history. And lastly,
The most important reason) While some people might want to genuinely discuss the quantitative value of the RRoD, many people use the issue as a wedge, to imply first that the 360 hardware sucks, while also suggesting that maybe-the-PS3-has-a-better-install-base at the same time. It's a fanboy argument, rather than an analytical one.
The quality of argumentation drops rapidly when this discussion comes up, so drop it.
Yes there is a time limit. It's pretty strict and makes the game very frustrating.[Nintex] said:They added a time limit to De Blob?
...did they try to sabotage it on purpose?
man, seeing these numbers....time sure does fly.doicare said:No and more no. The only reliable worldwide sales figures are Sony's and Microsoft's own shipment figures and they both show that for all but one year in 2008 when it was a virtual tie the ps3 has been consistantly catching up to the 360 worldwide.
ps3 - calendar year sales / ltd calendar year sales
2005 - not launched yet
2006 - 1.7m / 1.7m
2007 - 8.7m / 10.4m
2008 - 10.7m / 21.1m
2009 - 12.4m / 33.5m
2010 - 14.4m / 47.9m
360 - calendar year sales / ltd calendar year sales
2005 - 1.5m / 1.5m
2006 - 8.9m / 10.4m
2007 - 7.3m / 17.7m
2008 - 10.8m / 28.5m
2009 - 10.2m / 38.7m
2010 - 12.1m / 50.8m
360's ltd lead on the ps3
2005 - 1.5m
2006 - 8.7m
2007 - 7.3m
2008 - 7.4m
2009 - 5.2m
2010 - 2.9m
-Pyromaniac- said:man, seeing these numbers....time sure does fly.
PS3 outsold 360 last fiscal year in terms of software.wienke said:Yeah I can see if you're a game collector of if you prefer the 360 exclusives that you wouldn't switch to a PS3. I would also say that most people who buy a console don't necessarily collect games. You can get into other issues like controller preference or brand familiarity but there is still an opportunity to switch brands when one breaks.
Also when a 360 breaks and is replaced, you're not actually increasing the install base. When someone switches to Sony however, Sony's install base increases. Basically the hardware failures don't benefit Microsoft at all unless they're making a killer profit on the consoles.
So because of all that, the best metric for how well a console is doing still depends on overall software sales, which, Microsoft is still winning to the best of my knowledge.
Kam said:PS3 outsold 360 last fiscal year in terms of software.
PS3 - 115.6 million
360 - 103.1 million
It will be interesting to see how both consoles did for this fiscal year. Last I remember, it's pretty close taking into account data from US, Japan, UK, Spain, France and Germany. As it stands, both platforms are really healthy.
Kam said:PS3 outsold 360 last fiscal year in terms of software.
PS3 - 115.6 million
360 - 103.1 million
It will be interesting to see how both consoles did for this fiscal year. Last I remember, it's pretty close taking into account data from US, Japan, UK, Spain, France and Germany. As it stands, both platforms are really healthy.
Kam said:PS3 outsold 360 last fiscal year in terms of software.
PS3 - 115.6 million
360 - 103.1 million
It will be interesting to see how both consoles did for this fiscal year. Last I remember, it's pretty close taking into account data from US, Japan, UK, Spain, France and Germany. As it stands, both platforms are really healthy.
bigtroyjon said:Where are you getting 360 software numbers?
LinkPaco said:Haven't seen these figures before. Link?
If you would read, you'd see they're there also.szaromir said:He specifically asked about 360 software sales.
Hmmm, OK. It's fairly dated at this point though.Kam said:If you would read, you'd see they're there also.
Of course it is. It's for the last fiscal year. We don't know about this fiscal year yet.szaromir said:Hmmm, OK. It's fairly dated at this point though.
Kam said:It will be interesting to see how both consoles did for this fiscal year. Last I remember, it's pretty close taking into account data from US, Japan, UK, Spain, France and Germany. As it stands, both platforms are really healthy.
Arpharmd B said:I don't know about really healthy on the PS3 side. Sony recently announced that PSN loses money for them. Considering PS3 losses ate through all the profit of PS1 and 2, and they make a very small margin on the hardware compared to 360, and actually lose money on PSN (imagine how much MS makes in contrast with Live subs), and lukewarm sales of big budget exclusives, and now losing ground once again to 360 WW, not to mention Move absolutely getting spanked by Kinect, I don't think it's as rosy as some people think.
Stumpokapow said:For a clue on how the PS3 does "so well" globally compared to lacklustre sales in North America, the best place to look is not with Western European sales (although the PS3 does better there than in North America and generally outsells 360 although not always) or Japanese sales (where the PS3 naturally has a several million unit lead), it's elsewhere. Look at the PS2. Yes, it sold well everywhere, but what really took it from 100 million or so globally to 150 million is Eastern Europe and other EMEA territories.
Sony has always had better global distribution than Nintendo and now Microsoft. This is partially deliberate on Microsoft's part--they've favoured a slow expansion of the Xbox to smaller territories. Some countries have only got Xbox Live over the last year or two, others still don't have it--but it's partially a structural advantage Sony has had for some time.
Eastern Europe and other EMEA territories have an advantage as well, since they're considered more price sensitive (or "less well off", I guess. I don't mean any offence) and as such their sales are more likely to continue doing well after generational decline has set in in the major territories. I'm not sure that we really effectively see this in quarterly numbers either precisely because bundling all EMEA numbers together makes it hard to distinguish the constituent territories in a way that bundling Korea into "Asia" or Canada/Mexico into "North America" doesn't.
China remains elusive for all three manufacturers and even Korea has been a relatively recent focus for them. If any manufacturer could successfully expand into China, it'd easily tilt the worldwide battleground. Here WoW is a good comparison; WoW's subscription base is impressive, sure, but a full 50% of it is in China and that's what makes it tower over other Western MMOs... having access to that market. I suspect China and other Asian territories also make up the bulk of the user numbers for other online staples like League of Legends.
Yet software sales are increasing, hardware continues to do fine, they're no longer bleeding money, and they're expecting to increase profitability moving forward. I'd say that's healthy considering the PS3's track record. No one is painting a rosy picture. A rosy picture for Sony would be what was happening last generation. But it's ignorant to assume they're not in a good position right now considering what the last few years did to them.Arpharmd B said:I don't know about really healthy on the PS3 side. Sony recently announced that PSN loses money for them. Considering PS3 losses ate through all the profit of PS1 and 2, and they make a very small margin on the hardware compared to 360, and actually lose money on PSN (imagine how much MS makes in contrast with Live subs), and lukewarm sales of big budget exclusives, and now losing ground once again to 360 WW, not to mention Move absolutely getting spanked by Kinect, I don't think it's as rosy as some people think.
Kam said:Link
Their official data is released every quarter. You have individual threads made for them on GAF when that happens. Are you not aware of this?
Neuromancer said:Yes there is a time limit. It's pretty strict and makes the game very frustrating.
I have no idea why they did it. Probably to try to shoehorn some challenge into it, which I doubt anyone asked for.
I don't blame you.Paco said:I forget about them and I typically try not get wrapped up in Sales-Age GAF.
It will be interesting to see FY2010. I wouldn't be surprised to see 360 edge out the PS3 with Kinect, Halo Reach, Fable III, etc.
legend166 said:de Blob 1 had a time limit.
And it's not restricting at all. I never even pay attention to it.
OldJadedGamer said:This is what people don't pay attention to when thinking of worldwide user base numbers after 6 years.
Shiggy said:It was restricting if you wanted to paint everything - 100 %. But then you could still enter a cheat code for adding another 10 minutes.
Nonetheless, the game was repetitive and kind of boring, that's why I won't go for De Blob 2.
I'd tend to agree with this statement. Obviously, breaking out numbers - things look highly competitive and very, very close - which is nothing less than truth. However the general feeling about Sony remains the same - they're getting cock blocked on nearly every front whilst running on razor thin margins. It's not doom and gloom, Playstation/Sony isn't going anywhere - but losing this much ground, money and mind share within one generation is astounding.Arpharmd B said:I don't know about really healthy on the PS3 side. Sony recently announced that PSN loses money for them. Considering PS3 losses ate through all the profit of PS1 and 2, and they make a very small margin on the hardware compared to 360, and actually lose money on PSN (imagine how much MS makes in contrast with Live subs), and lukewarm sales of big budget exclusives, and now losing ground once again to 360 WW, not to mention Move absolutely getting spanked by Kinect, I don't think it's as rosy as some people think.
doicare said:No and more no. The only reliable worldwide sales figures are Sony's and Microsoft's own shipment figures and they both show that for all but one year in 2008 when it was a virtual tie the ps3 has been consistantly catching up to the 360 worldwide.
ps3 - calendar year sales / ltd calendar year sales
2005 - not launched yet
2006 - 1.7m / 1.7m
2007 - 8.7m / 10.4m
2008 - 10.7m / 21.1m
2009 - 12.4m / 33.5m
2010 - 14.4m / 47.9m
360 - calendar year sales / ltd calendar year sales
2005 - 1.5m / 1.5m
2006 - 8.9m / 10.4m
2007 - 7.3m / 17.7m
2008 - 10.8m / 28.5m
2009 - 10.2m / 38.7m
2010 - 12.1m / 50.8m
360's ltd lead on the ps3
2005 - 1.5m
2006 - 8.7m
2007 - 7.3m
2008 - 7.4m
2009 - 5.2m
2010 - 2.9m
Kam said:Yet software sales are increasing, hardware continues to do fine, they're no longer bleeding money, and they're expecting to increase profitability moving forward. I'd say that's healthy considering the PS3's track record. No one is painting a rosy picture. A rosy picture for Sony would be what was happening last generation. But it's ignorant to assume they're not in a good position right now considering what the last few years did to them.
To me, in all honesty, it seems some posters here like to paint an all or nothing picture. Pretty stupid all things considered and shows a lack of analytical ability.
Subscription plans when PS3 has enough MMOs a la mobile phones where the PS3 is included with one of the gamesStumpokapow said:China remains elusive for all three manufacturers and even Korea has been a relatively recent focus for them. If any manufacturer could successfully expand into China, it'd easily tilt the worldwide battleground. Here WoW is a good comparison; WoW's subscription base is impressive, sure, but a full 50% of it is in China and that's what makes it tower over other Western MMOs... having access to that market. I suspect China and other Asian territories also make up the bulk of the user numbers for other online staples like League of Legends.
Stripper13 said:Sony has done nothing right and at this point, are coasting on brand strength from the previous generations, something they will have to look long and hard at when releasing their next home console (and even NGP).
It's not all bad, they deliver some great games and sink money for free online play - not at all a bad thing for us gamers.
Guerrillas in the Mist said:Goddamn, remember when all the "analysts" predicted that the PS3 would far and away be in first in sales, with the 360 behind it and the Wii in distant third?
Makes me wonder how much these "analysts" know about the industry.
Dedication Through Light said:I thought it was predicted (in 2007/2008) that PS3 would surpass X360 sales in 2012? And further PS3 would lead software sales worldwide. I think PS3 is still on track to meet this prediction.
Well each to their own but I would hardly call the Slim a good step in the light of the mess of SKU's and removal of features. Just a less shitty one.Stephen Colbert said:No the people that see in black and white or those that make bs statements like this.
Sony made some really stupid mistakes at the start of the gen, but since then they have done plenty of things right. From the ps3 slim to nourishing their first party studios, developing new aaa franchises and acquiring new ones like media molecule to winning the format war, it's ludicrous to say they did nothing right.
If anything I think it's Microsoft that is now making some cocky moves that risk alientating core gamers (largely dumping their first party studios, jacking up the price of live, not announcing much core exclusive content in the near future).
You view them poorly, nonetheless.Arpharmd B said:I definitely do not view things in black and white. Yes, the PS3 business is MUCH better than it was, and yes they are finally seeing profitability. But the 360 business is much, much healthier for all the reasons I stated.
The people who see in black and white are those that can't see past the installed base.
Dedication Through Light said:I thought it was predicted (in 2007/2008) that PS3 would surpass X360 sales in 2012? And further PS3 would lead software sales worldwide. I think PS3 is still on track to meet this prediction.
Arpharmd B said:I don't know about really healthy on the PS3 side. Sony recently announced that PSN loses money for them. Considering PS3 losses ate through all the profit of PS1 and 2, and they make a very small margin on the hardware compared to 360, and actually lose money on PSN (imagine how much MS makes in contrast with Live subs), and lukewarm sales of big budget exclusives, and now losing ground once again to 360 WW, not to mention Move absolutely getting spanked by Kinect, I don't think it's as rosy as some people think.
Total industry sales rose 3% to $1.36 billion, compared to $1.33 billion in February 2010. Sales of video game hardware rose 10% ($467 million vs. $426 million), while software dropped ($601 million vs. $634 million). Video game accessories continued to rise, thanks to Microsoft's Kinect and Sony's PlayStation Move products ($257 million vs. $210 million).
And lost all their profit from the two earlier gens.Stephen Colbert said:Sony made some really stupid mistakes at the start of the gen, but since then they have done plenty of things right. From the ps3 slim to nourishing their first party studios, developing new aaa franchises and acquiring new ones like media molecule to winning the format war, it's ludicrous to say they did nothing right.
You are reading that wrong..Gorgon said:$257 vs $210 in sales doesn't look like the huge catastrophe that you're hinting at between Kinect and Move sales?
http://content.usatoday.com/communi...-game-sales-get-a-boost-in-february-/1?csp=34