Myoclonic Jerk
Member
Do you think they'll stick to the plan where innovation > graphics for REV ?
almokla said:but the PSP is a success.. whether it sold more than the DS or not ..
actually I never expected it to do THAT well in Japan...
Haleon said:Success is all relative. I'd bet money that Sony is losing a ton of profit on each unit sold (planning to make up for it on software sales), so if they don't sell an ASSLOAD of these things, their hopes of recuperating those losses via software sales are slim to none. Hello Xbox.
The End said:The big difference is that the bulk of the PSP is manufactured by Sony directly (even the screen will be, eventually), so that in a year or two, they'll be breaking even on the hardware, and in 3 years, they'll be making a profit on every unit sold.
You're probably right. That's the exact scenario that played out with the PS2. Sony just has to make that they can make it to the 2nd/3rd year in order to reach that point of profitability.The End said:The big difference is that the bulk of the PSP is manufactured by Sony directly (even the screen will be, eventually), so that in a year or two, they'll be breaking even on the hardware, and in 3 years, they'll be making a profit on every unit sold.
I don't think Sony's initial plan was to build hype and forego sales. Lord knows it's possible to do both at the same time. The Nintendo DS launch lineup (and current lineup) was abysmal (again, I've got one at home, so I'm no hater), but Nintendo rode the hype factor out of this world and sold a ton of DSes purely because of the Christmas time and good marketing. I can't possibly believe that Sony expected the launch to be this underwhelming in order to build a "I gotta have one!" type of attitude about the device so that they could sell them in December.DenogginizerOS said:Building the "I WANT ONE!!" factor form March to XMAS is precisely what SONY wants. The launch was a success. The screen problem and my addiction to WOW and Half-Life 2 has kept me from buying one. But I will buy one when the price comes down, games get better and cheaper, and the screen problems are rectified. And I still don't own a DS nor do I plan on buying one.
I think it's a bit of a worthless comparison given the different market strategies Nintendo applies to consoles and handhelds. With DS, they stayed true to their Game Boy ideals (low costs, long battery life, simple R&D, high durability, etc) rather than fall into an arms race with Sony. Revolution seems to be another matter, here Nintendo's matching the competition with pricing and capabilities from what we know. The only real similarity with the machines is that Nintendo's adding unique interfaces in an effort to differentiate themselves and push creativity.almokla said:Do you think they'll stick to the plan where innovation > graphics for REV ?
Not anytime soon. The most costly components are outsourced to Sharp (screen) and Samsung (RAM/media decoder). If Sony internalizes LCD production to their joint facility with Samsung, you can expect a perceptible drop in quality (as the PSP screen uses Sharp's propietary high visibility technology). They'll be sticking with Sharp for at least the next year, likely longer imo.The End said:The big difference is that the bulk of the PSP is manufactured by Sony directly (even the screen will be, eventually), so that in a year or two, they'll be breaking even on the hardware, and in 3 years, they'll be making a profit on every unit sold.
The production costs I've seen...ThongyDonk said:with Ninty making what $50 per DS sold or so then money on games, thats a whole lotta extra money in the bank than they would of had if Sony hadn't forced their hand.
Haleon said:I don't think Sony's initial plan was to build hype and forego sales. Lord knows it's possible to do both at the same time. The Nintendo DS launch lineup (and current lineup) was abysmal (again, I've got one at home, so I'm no hater), but Nintendo rode the hype factor out of this world and sold a ton of DSes purely because of the Christmas time and good marketing. I can't possibly believe that Sony expected the launch to be this underwhelming in order to build a "I gotta have one!" type of attitude about the device so that they could sell them in December.
So essentially, PSP is SCEI's Xbox.DenogginizerOS said:I think their plan is to build a reputation for the PSP that surpasses the DS's reputation and have people young and old build an appreciation for all the PSP can potentially offer. They need to be very calculating with their marketing. This can be accomplished more thoughtfully throughout the year without the craziness of XMAS hype.
I wouldn't count on that one. E3's going to shift industry and consumer focus squarely back on consoles for the next generation. As usual.DenogginizerOS said:(possibly surpassing the XBOX2).
jarrod said:So essentially, PSP is SCEI's Xbox.
I wouldn't count on that one. E3's going to shift industry and consumer focus squarely back on consoles for the next generation. As usual.
What's the reputation they're trying to build though? Is it a portable gaming machine? If so, it's not gonna fly at 250 bones and 50 bucks a game. Is it a portable DVD player? Probably not gonna fly with a 3 hour battey life and propietary discs that can't be played at home. It is a portable media player? Probably not gonna fly with expensive and propietary memory cards and a limited battery life and a large physical footprint.DenogginizerOS said:I think their plan is to build a reputation for the PSP that surpasses the DS's reputation and have people young and old build an appreciation for all the PSP can potentially offer. They need to be very calculating with their marketing. This can be accomplished more thoughtfully throughout the year without the craziness of XMAS hype. The DS will be painted as a machine for a more focused part of the population (kids and young at heart)thus appealing to fewer people, and the PSP (appealing to all age groups) will become the must-have game machine of the season (possibly surpassing the XBOX2).
Xbox TREE SIDDY and Revolution are likely to be equivilant in graphics power. There's also a chance the Revolution could have a slight edge.Drexon said:Here's the deal. PS2 won this gen war 'cause of the huge game selection. The graphics are now feeling a little old and the Xbox and GC games look way better. Next gen PS3 and Xbox 2 _will_ be the dominatiing ones in terms of graphics, spoiling the mainstream, making them graphics whores. Rev will probably loose points because of this, and after a while even more 3rd party support and then they join CCA, console creators anonymous, telling everybody that they were the hippie, trying to 'Revolutioniiiize, maaan'. Basically Sega all over.![]()
Well, it'll be an interesting year, that's for sure!DenogginizerOS said:I said it was their plan. I didn't say it was a good one.![]()
Do you think they'll stick to the plan where innovation > graphics for REV ?
CygnusXI said:Innovation, for the sake of innovation is.. uh.. not smart, from a business standpoint.
2 screens?
One being a touch screen?
Sure.
That's innovative... but that's about it.
What were they thinking.
You want a touch screen? Fine. Realize that most gamers can barely take their fingers off the controls to quickly pause a game, let alone weild a stylus *in game*.
Also I would tend to think that gamers (generally), and prolly programmers.. would prefer ONE big screen to two smaller ones, seperated... gives a disjointed feel.
To me, the PSP vs. DS is much less about graphics, than it is about functionality.
If you put the guts of the DS, in a PSP format (ie screen size, and such) I believe they would be serious competition, regardless of graphical difference.
Functionality will trump innovation every time.
jarrod said:GBA SP~ $45
NDS~ $115
PSP~ $285
That's the only quote we've heard.Riskbreaker said:Jarrod, it only cost $285 to produce a PSP?
almokla said:Do you think they'll stick to the plan where innovation > graphics for REV ?
I don't think Nintendo is doomed, but I do certainly think they can kiss 40-50 percent of their handheld marketshare goodbye. Combined with their loss of 60-70 percent of the home market, and they're gonna start getting nervous. Nintendo just needs to learn to satisfy everyone. If people want good graphics, give it to them. If they want innovation, give it to them. There's no reason in the world that something can't be innovative just because it features new technology.robertsan21 said:i take graphics before innovation anytime!
but nintendo has and still is dominate the handheld market but sonys PSP will kick of after a while and when sony makes a price drop on the machine"which they will" then the sales will kick of big time.
i am think within 2 years sony is dominating the handheld market.
Nintendo has dug a grave wich they cant come up from! being a nintendo fan from the start these are hard words for me to say but nintendo is do......
rev wont sell as much as PS3 we all know that no matter what they come up with!![]()
Good graphics is and was always good. It wasn't the most important fact (see PSX-N64, PS2-Xbox) but it is always good! So?will the DS/PSP lesson teach Nintendo that Graphics Power = good
In his defense, the PSP is handily outselling the DS in Japan on about a 2:1 basis every week.Blackace said:I don't follow your logic... where is Nintendo failing with the DS... I think you are just being a troll..
Or more relevant, GB-everything.Axsider said:It wasn't the most important fact (see PSX-N64, PS2-Xbox)
What?human5892 said::lol I guess the Gizmondo Sting Party went better than we all thought!
human5892 said:In his defense, the PSP is handily outselling the DS in Japan on about a 2:1 basis every week.
I'm not saying that that's necessarily because of graphics or whatever, but he does have at least some evidence to his side.
nevermind, sorry dude. I misread your statement. Thought you said "kiss their 40-50 percent".Haleon said:What?
Nintendo is not targetting you with the DS. They are trying to make people who don't play games, play games. That's where the touch screen comes in, and it's working. Perhaps nowadays kids learn to use a d-pad around the same age as they learn how to hold a crayon - who knows. But 90% of the people on this planet learnt how to hold a pen before learning how to use a d-pad, and there's probably at least 50% of people who never learned how to use a d-pad at all. So why is a stylus a bad idea again?CygnusXI said:To me, the PSP vs. DS is much less about graphics, than it is about functionality.
Functionality will trump innovation every time.
IIRC, in the more recent sales threads the PSP is around 50,000, while DS usually ends up around 25,000. I would do a search for you but the search function is misbehaving for me right now.Blackace said:2 to 1 source?
Haleon said:I don't think Nintendo is doomed, but I do certainly think they can kiss 40-50 percent of their handheld marketshare goodbye. Combined with their loss of 60-70 percent of the home market, and they're gonna start getting nervous. Nintendo just needs to learn to satisfy everyone. If people want good graphics, give it to them. If they want innovation, give it to them. There's no reason in the world that something can't be innovative just because it features new technology.
Jonnyram said:Nintendo is not targetting you with the DS. They are trying to make people who don't play games, play games. That's where the touch screen comes in, and it's working. Perhaps nowadays kids learn to use a d-pad around the same age as they learn how to hold a crayon - who knows. But 90% of the people on this planet learnt how to hold a pen before learning how to use a d-pad, and there's probably at least 50% of people who never learned how to use a d-pad at all. So why is a stylus a bad idea again?
The dual screen, I won't argue with anyone about because until a game comes along that makes me think "yeah, that's what it's all about", I'm not 100% convinced. Kirby and Yoshi make decent use of it, but they're not the ultimate examples.
So does mine. She's liked a few games (Eternal Darkness, Metal Gear Solid 3), but for the most part she thinks they are too confusing (which is especially funny considering she liked MGS). But she can't stop playing the DS. She loves Warioware and Yoshi.Blackace said:my gf loves the DS and she hates games...
As a sane human being I have learnt long ago that Nintendo is a bunch of pot smokers.LUNA said:As a GAMEplayer what I have learnt is that Nintendo is right for once.
No no that's Atari, don't you remember the stories?fennec fox said:As a sane human being I have learnt long ago that Nintendo is a bunch of pot smokers.