jarrod said: Well, the article is pretty shitty and really badly researched. Abandoning PSP is obviously the wrong course of action, but there are pretty huge problems with the platform and I do think Sony needs to respond quickly before the rest of the industry sinks it. The "PSP revival" this past 2nd half went disasterously for them, I don't think PSP can survive another year like 2009 and I doubt most publishers and retailers will stick around if it does.
Wii software sales are amazing, especially considering it's bundled with a pack in in almost all markets. It's moved more software than any other console this generation, and what, like four times as much as PSP has... it's a laughably incomparable situation. Also, Game Gear (Sega's one legitimate attempt at Nintendo's handheld crown) managed 20-25% marketshare during it's active lifespan. Not quite up there with PSP's 30-35%, but not all that far behind and certainly not a "failure" historically. This revisionist history of PSP being the only decent handheld competitor has to stop, they weren't the first and they won't be the last. If anything, the media seems to be lending more credence to iPhone/iPod touch as the strongest handheld Nintendo competitor.
I'd have to disagree. The vast bulk of Sony's interesting PSP content seems to be coming from America and Europe, if anything it's their Japanese studios that are overlooking it. Patapon and Loco Roco were awesome, but besides that it's been pretty dry. Also, PSP saw a pretty massive tumble in Japan this year, the worst decline of any platform. It basically went from nearly selling on par with DS in 2008 to nearly selling on par with Wii in 2009 (which itself had a huge drop). And in software sales, it's well behind Wii even in Japan. |
I think you are crazy. Especially with MH on the eastern side. Even if it is selling less than it was its not costing any per consumer purchase.