Again, I could just as easily say PS1 killed hardcore gaming. This was an argument thrown around allot back in the mid 90's and quite a bit of it has proven true. 2d games are virtually non-existant, shmups are a nich just like fighters and "true" RPG's are no more. The market changes, just as peoples taste change and this is something that can't be helped, but on the upside the remaining "true" RPG's, Shumps, ect are very "hardcore". Of course sll of this can be traced back to the rise of the PS1, it's emphasis on 3d and Sony's goal of selling games to the most people - something Nintendo decides to call the casual market. Make no mistake about it, Sony want's to appeal to the "casuals" as much as possible and it's how their previous systems sold well. Remember Crash Bandicoot? That was far from a "hardcore" title and something meant to sell to the masses. Or look at the PS2's library for some modern proof. Madden and the like, as well as tons of kiddie games(yes, more than nitnendo) just goes to show how the PS2 is built on the casual market. In my mind you're logic is fataly flawed, not to mention lacking in evidence. With casual titles and a large market share will come many niche games becuase that will become a viable market on a system with a large install base. Don't believe me then just look at you're beloved PS2 and PS1, systems that sold 100mil by appealing to the casuals. BTW, if we are to take monopoly in the strictist sense of the term then what has Nintendo done recently that's monoploistic? Why bring up monopoly at all if you arn't going to explicitly state how Nintendo will be a worse marketleader than Sony, especially if you dont back anything up.
Leo-j said: If a dvd for a pc game holds what? Crysis at 3000p or something, why in the world cant a blu-ray disc do the same?
ssj12 said: Player specific decoders are nothing more than specialized GPUs. Gran Turismo is the trust driving simulator of them all.
"Why do they call it the xbox 360? Because when you see it, you'll turn 360 degrees and walk away"