Radioactive IT
Is it possible the games don't matter anymore for PS3 to succeed? | Is it possible the games don't matter anymore for PS3 to succeed? |
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| by Mike Bantick | |
| Monday, 25 June 2007 | |
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According to nexgenwars.com the Xbox 360 is enjoying an 11.17 million sales base with the Wii gaining everyday on 8.1 million. Meanwhile 3.48 million PS3's have gone home - with perhaps a large percentage bought for Blu-ray capabilities rather than as a gaming machine. And here is the key. Last week Ken Kutaragi, the father of the PlayStation stepped down as chairman of Sony. This does not represent a complete changing of the guard at the electronic giant, with focus on the PS3 as the flag-ship of the company not altering. But it does give them a chance to pause for a fresh riposte at the entertainment space. A price cut will help, but perhaps, as Alex pointed out in his article, it is time to forget promising of great things to come (especially un-proven gaming IP's) and look at the power of the box as it stands today.
The PS3 can bring a lot of home technology needs together into an integrated black box. Internet connectivity, media cards, Blu-ray, music, PSP interactivity, Linux sand-box and so on. |
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