BraLoD said:
Sony will have no need to keep the price down if the other option is paying $1000+ on a Xbox PC. My guess would be that the PS6 will cost $700 and there will only be a discless version of it, with support to add a disc drive like the PS5 Slim and Pro. Should have a bundle of it plus the disc drive for $750 for convenience plus a small discount ($20). I do think the PS6 will ship with a 2tb SSD as the only option tho, but would like to see a 1tb version for $650 (or even $600 as they cost about $100 now), they should have done the same for the PS5 Pro. I think the Xbox Helix will cost $1100 so asking $700 for a PS6 will look like a blessing, Sony won't eat basically any loss over it from day one, $50 tops if they want to have a round number like I'm thinking. $700 for a PS6 that is 3x stronger than a PS5 Pro, has access to PSSR 2 (they are purposedly not calling the PS5 Pro current upgrade now PSSR 2 to save it for marketing) with Path Tracing, comes with the Dualsense 2, and the benefit of being the primary system games are developed for, costing what the PS5 Pro launched at despite this huge price increases and it having even better SSD and RAm, doesn't sound bad at all IF you are willing to pay $700 in the first place (won't have a similar choice nowhere near that price point otherwise tho). It'll definitely price out a lot of people, but sadly there won't be where to run off to, so I think if it doesn't reach $800 it still look like the best deal around by far. |
Rough times if even some of this is true. I will say for myself, I would rather get the PS6 version of this idea over the XBOX PC. I already have a PC. Even if XBOX had enough exclusive games to make me buy and XBOX, I would still buy all the PC games on Steam rather than anywhere else. There is no scenario I see here where I would change my buying habits from this:PS>PC>XBOX
If console prices are going up as much as people are talking about people are more than likely to stick with prior generations or older PCs.
We are very likely heading into the dark ages of both PCs and Consoles. For how long, I can't predict, but I will call it. The dark ages of gaming are upon us.











