By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
Nuvendil said:
Lawlight said:

In the US? Sales look fairly flat to me with the $199 PS4 helping a lot. Sales were still down by quite a bit compared to 2015. Worldwide, of course, it’s showing legs like a normal PS console would. And not sure why regular PS4 owners would need to move to the Slim though a small fraction have upgraded to the Pro. And no, that’s not how the PS1, PS2 and PS3 kept selling. Consoles are different to handhelds - in general, people just don’t change to a different model unless they need to. The PS consoles keep selling because as time goes by prices go down making it more affordable to more people while, at the same time,the library gets better. Selling new models to current owners - that’s a Nintendo practice. How many 3DS models did they release? 7?

That is a Nintendo *handheld* practice.  The N64, GCN, Wii, and Wii U never had serious revisions to the units themselves.  Sony, however, has always had multiple console revisions.  Not criticising, just pointing it out.  And I said that was part of the way they kept selling.  Library growth and competitive pricing were part of that too.

And the basic PS4 had 500GB of storage.  The current Slim is 1TB.  With file size bloat ever growing, that is a significant difference.  

Edit: to be clear, I never said Nintendo didn't do similar things.  Just that Sony has in the past.  PS3 in particular.  Though the PS One accounts for over 28 million of the origina Playstation's sales.

PSOne-2000

PS2-2000

PSP-2004

PS2 Slim-2004

PS3-2006

PSP 2000-2007

PSP 3000-2008

PS3 Slim-2009

PSP Go-2009

PSP E1000-2011

Vita-2011

PS3 Super Slim-2012

Vita 2000-2013

PS4-2013

PS4 Slim-2016

PS4 Pro-2016

 

Its a Nintendo thing..........



When the herd loses its way, the shepard must kill the bull that leads them astray.