If we're being perfectly honest here, the reaction to last year's Xbox 360's numbers was one of impatience.
We were waiting for the great market leader to come galloping through the gate, and aside from the Wii, that never happened.
One year ago, no one imagined that Microsoft's "good enough, I guess." hardware sales and "OMGWTF fantastic" hardware sales would in fact become the standard that Sony would fail to reach.
But here we are. A market leader that isn't selling the highest budget software. A second place contender that is moving practically all the software. And a machine which has a problem, which is that hardly anyone wants it, and if I spent days researching I couldn't come up with a great reason as to why that is.
I'll try though.
At first, the PS3 was going to be seen as a technologically superior system with all the games you remember playing on your PS2, and can get on no other system.
The problem with the graphics part is that no one really cares. The second problem is that Sony apparently created their development tools in Latin or something.
The other problem is obvious. This is the multiplatform generation, and since there's
A) No HD system that can possibly sell above 50 million
and
B) The Xbox 360's ability to move software is phenomenal.
Sony can kiss most third party exclusives goodbye.
But those aren't the real problems, are they?
The problem is that the PS3 launched under a cloud of negativity, about its price, about its lack of games.
Sony outmatched Microsoft last generation by selling a system that just had games.
To one-up itself, Sony decided that they needed a system that does everything else first, mainstream be damned.
I used to say that the Xbox 360 didn't have enough features, not enough hard drive space, but this only made people realize the system was for gamers. And now that's the focus of their marketing. The system with the games you want to play.
I used to say (well, still do) that the Xbox 360 was a piece of junk hardware. Now it's just a PS2 with a disc read error problem, a utilitarian machine for everyone.
Nintendo saw spikes of success last generation by keeping its identity (the release of Mario, Zelda, Metroid, Mario Kart), but Sony doesn't really have that.
The best Sony can hope for is for the Wii to lose favor among the public, and for HD gaming in general to take off the way the PS2 and Xbox moved software around 2003-2004.
Otherwise, we'll just see a big snowball of gloomy outcomes, and a Sony system cut short in a few years time.