NightDragon83 said:
You're kinda comparing apples to oranges with that statement... remember, when the PS1/ SEGA Saturn originally launched in 1995, CD-ROM technology was still pretty expensive, especially for game consoles during that time which required faster drive speeds. The two previous CD-based game systems that were released, the Phillips CD-I and Panasonic 3DO, each costed a whopping $700 at launch, so at $299, and with much more powerful hardware under the hood, the PS1 was actually priced very well... in fact, its $299 launch price is what allowed Sony to jump ahead of SEGA (who had only launched the Saturn just 4 months earlier at $399) and take the lead in the 32-bit generation. Now when the PS2 launched in 2000, CD-Rom was well established and relatively inexpensive, and Sony probably could have launched the PS2 at $199 if it strictly used CDs again. But DVD was becoming the new video standard, so Sony utilized it as the new storage medium for its games and equipped the PS2 with DVD-playback capabilities, and when you consider the fact that stand-alone players were going for anywhere from $200-$300 and up at the time, that was a steal for having it included with the PS2. That concludes our videogame history lesson for today... class dismissed! |
Thanks for clearing things up. Didn't know standard DVD's back then were 200-300 dollars....

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