Chittagong said:
Heh, point proven, I didn't even need to mention PSP and yet this thread got filled with
"Nooooo!!! It's not like PSP!! PSP is different in many ways!"
HMMMM..
Funny enough, I never saw PSP at all as the item to compare Nomad to. The obvious Nomad comparison to me is the GBA, simply because the capabilities aren't that much different then SNES versus Genesis. Nomad came out in '95 at $179, and for all intents and purposes was pretty much a luxury item in the vein of the Turbo Express and CD-X, with the ability to play almost any Genesis game you owned wherever you wanted. The GBA is bascailly a SNES+ with psuedo 3D capabilities, has a ton of NES and SNES ports, and cost $99 at launch.
I always thought GBA was underpowered tech simply due to the fact that Nomad had provided much of what GBA did a full six years prior, and it's had a domino effect on DS where it now looks extremely underpowered next to PSP for the price it's currently set at. Plus DS almost seems Sega-esque in terms of it's similarity to the SP already on the market...will it's capabilities really look that different to the average consumer? Will they be able to sell the difference or potential that can be had with that second screen? Cause let's face it, the whole connectivity advantage hardly set the world on fire. Frankly, I'm not sure how Nintendo's gonna be able to sell the capabilities of that second screen outside of in-store demos, and I'm not sure that'll be enough. It's not that dissimilar to the impossible challenge Nintendo had with selling the Virtual Boy on TV or in print (not to compare the two machines, just comparing the same obstacle).
PSP on the other hand is in a very strong position. The Playstation brand is gold, the price is more then reasonable for a system using tech similar to a home-based machine released just four and a half years ago, and I imagine third parties will be all over it. And that $50 price difference is huge. In the grand scheme of things, it isn't that much.
I will say this...I think the Gameboy reached far more adults in the early 90's then people think. In fact I remember seeing print ads specifically aimed at adults, such as one showing a businessman using a GB on a flight. Back then portable phones were extremely rare and PDA's and MP3 players were non-existant, so what better way was there for a guy on a business flight to pass a few hours then playing a little Tetris, a game that was familiar to virtually anyone with any access to a PC or gaming platform back then? I think GBA redesign with the SP was another way to target that same market. That said, I think Sony will be even more aggressive in terms of going after that same audience. I imagine with most adults having PS2's as their primary gaming devices for Madden and Gran Turismo, PSP's got a very good chance of making inroads there with the sorts of software that'll be on offer.
Agent X said:
Oh, man, I can't believe so many people here are bagging on the Nomad. It's my preferred method of playing Genesis games now. I can carry it around to any room in the house, lie down on the couch or in bed, plug in the AC adapter, and play Genesis. I can even hook it up to the TV if I don't feel like looking at the little LCD screen. It's great!
Keep in mind that I never take the thing out of my house. In the nearly seven years I've owned it, I've tried using batteries in it twice--maybe three times--for about 15-20 minutes total. Apart from that, I always have it connected to AC when I play. It's bulky and sucks up battery power, so it's not exactly great for taking outside--but as a "within the house" portable, it does the job nicely.
Exactly...seriously, fuck anyone who disses Nomad.
Miburou said:
Because it means brand new games you can't play anywhere else instead of existing games that you can play on your PS2.
Heh, that makes no sense to me...buying a portable where I can play the same games I already have on the road makes a lot more sense then buying a bunch of ports and psuedo-ports (and you're kidding yourself if you don't think PSP won't be getting it's fair share of those). Who gives a shit if the games are available anywhere else or not? That obviously hasn't stopped those NES ports on GBA from selling.
If Nintendo had decided to sell a portable that could play SNES games as is (along with receiving new games) instead of the GBA, it would've taken them two years for the supply to meet demand. You've got 800 used and classic games to choose from...for cheap! I don't know how that isn't a selling point. Nomad simply wasn't portable enough for people to bother with, plus it wasn't widely available (to be fair a SNES portable would be even less portable then Nomad, considering the size of the SNES carts).
Future said:
PSP's rechargeable battery places it in the same venue as cell phones, ipods, and the GB:SP...items people have become used to recharging constantly almost everyday. Combine that with the better screen and games designed for portability and unique to the system, there is no comparison.
Agreed...I don't see too many instances where a person is going to have a need to be playing PSP games more then three or four hours at a time, and with a battery you can recharge all the time (which as you said people are used to doing now) I don't see the big deal. It's a far different deal to the colour portables of the early 90's that ate up mutiple AA batteries like candy.