This is a false dilemma. Gamers don't have to "miss" anything on Wii, because most people who own the graphically superior systems will also own the Wii. The lower price point of the Wii allows this. Nintendo has wriggled its way into the market in such a way that it can sell its system to the casual gamers and Nintendo fans as well as every hardcore gamer who wants a different experience once in a while.
albhum said:
The only anti-Sony campaign is the one put on by Sony itself. The PS3 doesn't need its own jeering squad; Sony's endless stream of business and PR blunders generates all the bad press they could ever use.
That being said, I don't think this is true at all:
naznatips said:
TalonMan said:
My point in quoting this isn't that these people aren't buying, but that people like this exist - and they exist in droves: people who badly want a PS3, but are just waiting for Sony to give them the slightest incentive to buy one. Sure, the PS3 is behind in sales right now, but none of the new consoles has even breached the 10mil mark yet. There are still 100 million+ gamers from last generation still waiting to make their next purchase, and the vast majority of them were PS2 owners. They're comfortable with the PS controller, they're fans of the PS brandname, and they've already been sold on the Sony-exclusive (or semi-exclusive) franchises. They're all waiting, and all they need is a reason to upgrade. I'm one of these. And these intangible factors add up to a mountain more than the 360's tangible advantages.
That's why, if Sony hits us by this Christmas with MGS4, Assassin's Creed, GTA4, LittleBigPlanet, etc. (notice that they don't all have to be exclusives), and a price drop, all of this bad publicity will vanish like a bad dream. The turnaround will happen overnight. All Sony has to do is not screw it up... kind of like they've been so dismally failing to do for the last year or so. And a screwup is still definitely possible: they could stubbornly maintain the $600 price tag, they could let a major exclusive slip away (or drive one away), they could make a bunch more PR blunders... use your imagination! So far they've been doing their best to invent new ways to fail. But at some point they've got to learn, and when it happens they've got nowhere to go but up.







