Speevy said::lol
No one's going to axe the PS3. I mean, it is a failure, but it's going to get better before the end.
Not to mention its basically singlehandidly winning the format war for Sony.
Speevy said::lol
No one's going to axe the PS3. I mean, it is a failure, but it's going to get better before the end.
Speevy said::lol
No one's going to axe the PS3. I mean, it is a failure, but it's going to get better before the end.
schuelma said:Not to mention its basically singlehandidly winning the format war for Sony.
N64 was not nearly as dire. It did pretty well in the US. Also, I think that Nintendo is different enough from Sony as that they wouldn't put themselves in a position where Profit is a gamble.Sharp said:You'd like that, wouldn't you. Would you rather that Nintendo had axed the N64 so we never saw Zelda:OoT? Beause if you would you are not my friend.
Wiitard said:So if PS3 development and subsidiation stops now Sony is going to lose the format war? Really?
schuelma said:Well, wouldn't blue ray momentum probably die down?
schuelma said:Just my opinion, but you guys are setting yourself up for disappointment if you think the PS3 is going to completely fail. Don't get me wrong, its going to be a massive massive disappointment, but I think it will still find an audience in the end.
Speevy said::lol
No one's going to axe the PS3. I mean, it is a failure, but it's going to get better before the end.
schuelma said:Just my opinion, but you guys are setting yourself up for disappointment if you think the PS3 is going to completely fail. Don't get me wrong, its going to be a massive massive disappointment, but I think it will still find an audience in the end.
The Dreamcast certainly has an audience. As does the Jaguar and the 3DO.schuelma said:Just my opinion, but you guys are setting yourself up for disappointment if you think the PS3 is going to completely fail. Don't get me wrong, its going to be a massive massive disappointment, but I think it will still find an audience in the end.
Mr. Pachunga Chung said:agreed, well i think it will pick up a little...just not any massive turnaround like people say.
bmf said:The Dreamcast certainly has an audience. As does the Jaguar and the 3DO.
I think the audience on PS3 being from "graphic whores" is almost as bad as having none, since the graphic whores will only want the games that are most expensive to make.. And if they aren't too many, well, the games bomb.schuelma said:Wow, I can't believe you guys are making me defend the PS3 here, but they do have the games (future lineup I mean) and the technology edge to carve out an audience. Some people are graphics whores and when the PS3 is at a somewhat reasonable price those people will jump on board and make a base. Not a huge one, but its not going to just die next year.
Wiitard said:Ok, in console space normal law of economics don't apply, consoles never get cancelled even if they lose billions and billions and billions. It makes total sense to sell PS3 at $250 loss to a Japanese consumer who is not interested in games or Blu-Ray movies and will use it for BC. It makes sense to sell the PS3 at $150 to a US 360 owner who will buy a couple of game a year for it. Sure.
Sony is doing exactly the right thing and should just stay the course and keep losing billions of real money because there are some guys on GAF who think it might find a market three years down the road.
brain_stew said:Well that had a lot to do with Sega dumping the Genesis/MegaDrive way too early. As far as I'm aware the Mega Drive came out on top in Europe, in the UK at least it seemed like it utterly dominated.
schuelma said:Just tell me flat out- Will Sony drop the PS3 within the next year? Be honest. Not a hypothetical or a what if. Will they or not.
schuelma said:Just tell me flat out- Will Sony drop the PS3 within the next year? Be honest. Not a hypothetical or a what if. Will they or not.
Flakster99 said:Will Sony's hardware and the economics associated allow them to drop the price without losing their shirt in the process is the real question.
With the 360 and the Wii breathing down their neck, we're going to find out very soon. What is the better business model, right now - will Sony gamble in small chunks with small, consistent price cuts($20-$50), with software (decent movie, older game) pack ins? Or will they go for the gusto and massively drop the price, pack in a quality game, say Lair, or Ratchet and Spiderman 3?
I anticipate somewhere in between.
Wiitard said:Read my previous posts. I'm not even advocating for them to actually, officially drop it.
Here is what I think will be happening in a year:
1) The hardware will stop being subsidized (which in effect means almost complete abandonment of US and Japan);
2) Dramatic reduction of fist party effort on PS3 and shift to PS@ and PSP.
3) Repeated declarations by all Sony managment brass that they are 100% commited to PS3.
This is what I called pulling the plug. It makes little sense for them to actually declare anything officially. So I do not expect an official announcement.
Wiitard said:Ok, in console space normal law of economics don't apply, consoles never get cancelled even if they lose billions and billions and billions. It makes total sense to sell PS3 at $250 loss to a Japanese consumer who is not interested in games or Blu-Ray movies and will use it for BC. It makes sense to sell the PS3 at $150 to a US 360 owner who will buy a couple of game a year for it. Sure.
Sony is doing exactly the right thing and should just stay the course and keep losing billions of real money because there are some guys on GAF who think it might find a market three years down the road.
Wiitard said:Even is Japan? You antencipate them to be sweetening the deal even in Japan?
schuelma said:Ok..so within the next year you honestly genuinely think Sony is going to "pull the plug" as you say. Is that correct?
Flakster99 said:Oops. My post was meant for the US. Right now I'm at a loss for words, I'm not sure what can help the PS3 in Japan, especially with how Sony positioned itself over there with release dates, quality of software, console bulk, HD and especially console/software price. /shrug
Even if that is the case, they still have to cover marketing and support (end user and developer). Developer and end user support is probably a less than $20,000,000 a year, but marketing to the mainstream still means TV ads, and those cost a bunch. It's kind of a death spiral. At this point next year, I think that the best they can hope for is to keep their company in the black, and not get their pants sued off by devs and pubs who were promised the world.Wiitard said:But every PS3 manufactured from this point on is going to be sold at cost or at fairly trivial loss.
RiskyChris said:Uh, Dreamcast?
If Sony doesn't think it has the money to endure this generation, and also finds it too risky (WOOO!) to try to get a foothold on generation 8, there's probably cause for the system to go under. Is this going to happen? Not likely.
bmf said:Even if that is the case, they still have to cover marketing and support (end user and developer). Developer and end user support is probably a less than $20,000,000 a year, but marketing to the mainstream still means TV ads, and those cost a bunch. It's kind of a death spiral. At this point next year, I think that the best they can hope for is to keep their company in the black, and not get their pants sued off by devs and pubs who were promised the world.
Wiitard said:My point is that in 3 month the Japanese retailers will run out of PS3 stock. And there is no market in Japan for PS3 sold at their real cost (probably $750 now). Why the **** should you give every consumer a present?
Flakster99 said:Just look how the N64 fared in Japan in relation to under selling, having the wrong vision at the wrong time for it's home (JP) market. Money talks, bullshit walks. It happened to Sega, to Nintendo, and it's happening to Sony.
The PS3 may very well pull a N64 in the sense of selling a shit load of 1st/2nd party software, and just enough hardware to support themselves and their chosen software parties. I could go for this.
I'd describe that as a best case scenario at this point. The Otaku have their PS3s, but it will not hit mainstream.Flakster99 said:Just look how the N64 fared in Japan in relation to under selling, having the wrong vision at the wrong time for it's home (JP) market. Money talks, bullshit walks. It happened to Sega, to Nintendo, and it's happening to Sony.
The PS3 may very well pull a N64 in the sense of selling a shit load of 1st/2nd party software, and just enough hardware to support themselves and their chosen software parties. I could go for this.
Flakster99 said:Just look how the N64 fared in Japan in relation to under selling, having the wrong vision at the wrong time for it's home (JP) market. Money talks, bullshit walks. It happened to Sega, to Nintendo, and it's happening to Sony.
The PS3 may very well pull a N64 in the sense of selling a shit load of 1st/2nd party software, and just enough hardware to support themselves and their chosen software parties. I could go for this.
ghostlyjoe said:The conventional wisdom is that the PS3 will sell enough software in the west to maintain its viability. Why do you guys think that won't be the case? Clearly, there is compelling software promised for the machine -- third parties have not abandoned it -- and its fans insist it will hang around long enough to become reasonably priced. Not to mention, Sony HAS to stick with it to have any hope of recovering its losses and staying ahead of the HD-disc market.
If the situation was as dire as you are painting, wouldn't we be seeing canceled projects? Retailers declining new stock?
I just can't fathom Sony pulling PS3 support this quickly, and other than sales figures, we haven't seen any evidence that the industry as a whole has lost faith.
Wiitard said:So you guys who think Sony will be just marching on no matter what, you actually believe in thins:
Sony releases game X and loses 20 million in costs and marketing. Sequel for X is approved.
Sony releases game Y and loses 20 million in costs and marketing. Sequel for Y is approved.
Sony releases game Z and loses 20 million in costs and marketing. Sequel for Z is approved.
Xavien said:I Dunno, Nintendo's First Party in the N64-era produced some of the most highly rated games ever known. Sales of those first-party games were also very good (enough to keep Nintendo afloat atleast).
I really don't think that Sony's first party can compare to N64-era Nintendo (we are talking about Super Mario 64 and Ocarina of Time here).
So, i don't think sony has strong enough development studios to support the PS3 on its own.
Not enough compelling software. Will they be able to average 15 software sales per machine sold?ghostlyjoe said:The conventional wisdom is that the PS3 will sell enough software in the west to maintain its viability. Why do you guys think that won't be the case?
Is there enough? Will we see the announcements of new software through the rest of the year?ghostlyjoe said:Clearly, there is compelling software promised for the machine
Yetghostlyjoe said:-- third parties have not abandoned it --
Their most vocal fans.ghostlyjoe said:and its fans insist it will hang around long enough to become reasonably priced.
They're now selling a $500 Blu-Ray player. How long until they're selling a $400 one? $300? $200? They're already selling these at a profit, albeit a small one. The manufacturing costs just go down.ghostlyjoe said:Not to mention, Sony HAS to stick with it to have any hope of recovering its losses and staying ahead of the HD-disc market.
More silent drops at first. Later some that just fail to materialize at retail. Companies tend to be embarrassed when they bet on the wrong horse.ghostlyjoe said:If the situation was as dire as you are painting, wouldn't we be seeing canceled projects?
What's to say they haven't been? It's not the type of thing you advertise.ghostlyjoe said:Retailers declining new stock?
Faith has little to do with it this far in. The numbers are god.ghostlyjoe said:I just can't fathom Sony pulling PS3 support this quickly, and other than sales figures, we haven't seen any evidence that the industry as a whole has lost faith.
ghostlyjoe said:The conventional wisdom is that the PS3 will sell enough software in the west to maintain its viability. Why do you guys think that won't be the case? Clearly, there is compelling software promised for the machine -- third parties have not abandoned it -- and its fans insist it will hang around long enough to become reasonably priced. Not to mention, Sony HAS to stick with it to have any hope of recovering its losses and staying ahead of the HD-disc market.
If the situation was as dire as you are painting, wouldn't we be seeing canceled projects? Retailers declining new stock?
I just can't fathom Sony pulling PS3 support this quickly, and other than sales figures, we haven't seen any evidence that the industry as a whole has lost faith.
Xavien said:There are 2.2 Million PS3's out there in the channel right now, i don't think the channel will accept anymore. So yes, we should see retailers declining stock soon (that's if Sony is still producing PS3's).
Third Parties are wavering right now, you can be sure that if sales don't pick up, most games will go Multi-platform or future games will go to the Wii, we have already seen evidence of this.
Loyalty has it's limits.
ghostlyjoe said:Are those official figures?
Frankly, not enough high-profile games have been released at this point to the software situation is a black hole. And keep in mind that smaller userbases tend to be more rabid userbases. The N64 moved big games. The GC moved big games. The XBox moved big games. I would think games like FFXIII and GOW3 will have an impressive attach rate and produce a profit even on the relatively anemic userbase the PS3 seems to be building.
Wiitard said:So you guys who think Sony will be just marching on no matter what, you actually believe in thins:
Sony releases game X and loses 20 million in costs and marketing. Sequel for X is approved.
Sony releases game Y and loses 20 million in costs and marketing. Sequel for Y is approved.
Sony releases game Z and loses 20 million in costs and marketing. Sequel for Z is approved.
ghostlyjoe said:The conventional wisdom is that the PS3 will sell enough software in the west to maintain its viability. Why do you guys think that won't be the case? Clearly, there is compelling software promised for the machine -- third parties have not abandoned it -- and its fans insist it will hang around long enough to become reasonably priced. Not to mention, Sony HAS to stick with it to have any hope of recovering its losses and staying ahead of the HD-disc market.
If the situation was as dire as you are painting, wouldn't we be seeing canceled projects? Retailers declining new stock?
I just can't fathom Sony pulling PS3 support this quickly, and other than sales figures, we haven't seen any evidence that the industry as a whole has lost faith.
Wiitard said:I don't see anybody making any new bets on PS3. Nobody is doing it. And I don't think Sony HQ is doing it either.
The question is: do you see Sony deciding to sink anther billion in. And then another billion? There is a level of survival to be had with non-subsidized hardware (after the current pile runs out maybe early next year), finishing first party projects and getting 360 ports.
As for cancelled projects, I'm sure Sony would not be too vocal about those. The issue is what happens after Killzone 2, Liar, HS and etc are done. I bet that all the curent signs are pointing to "not much on PS3 front".
fernoca said:Ehr..Sorry..but..Source?
ghostlyjoe said:I'm certainly not an expert on console business, but until this thread, I'd see no such dire predictions. The worst I'd seen was forecasts of GC-like positioning, which isn't great but isn't horrible for owners (despite its reputation, the GC had a lot of good software by the end). But now we're declaring the death of the console and the abandonment of the existing userbase? That's a much different proposition. You'll have to excuse my incredulity, but I'm not yet ready to accept that as likely, let alone inevitable.