Comments on: Why Sony needs to (but can't) drop the price of the PS3
iSuppli breaks down the Playstation 3 and sees cost savings for Sony. But even still, can Sony drop the price of the console to compete against cheaper alternatives?
iSuppli breaks down the Playstation 3 and sees cost savings for Sony. But even still, can Sony drop the price of the console to compete against cheaper alternatives?
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Along with the holidays came a Wii in the home. This thing is the greatest family console I have experienced in years. However, when the kids go to bed and I am itching for some high end gaming, I cannot do much with the Wii ;-(
I think sony needs to re-market themselves as an industry leader and adjust the console down around $329.96 ( some wacky wal-mart pricing ) or something close to $299 at the big box stores. End of story. No way around it. The price needs to come down. They can recoup the costs with hardware add-ons and subscriptions as others have noted with buying network modules and extra controllers.
Come on Sony, wake up! ;-)
You might be correct about the price point, the average consumer, and the recession. I'm sure Sony didn't take the recession into consideration when the PS3 development started. But, it clearly is a superior piece of hardware. Sony tends to think more LONG-TERM. It's something businesses are going to have to get used to if we are going to change the crisis we're in. The PS3 is designed to last for several years... and yes, to lose money until it gets consolidated in parts. The XBox and Wii are cheap (though the Wii does get credit for being a great unique idea... and fun other way of gaming). The only real loser here is M$ building the typical piece of short-term junk.
Will Sony weather the recession? I hope so. Did Sony do the PS3 right? No doubt here! No way I'd trade my PS3 for an XBox or Wii... even if someone gave me $100 with it. It's worth way more than the price difference. Maybe the average consumer doesn't get that, which would explain the sales numbers. But give Sony time... the PS3 platform is just getting going.... and the future looks very bright.
When talking about "platform" (and games consoles are now platforms more than they were before) you have to include much much more things into consideration.
Game library of PS3 is falling behind of Xbox360 is precisely the result of higher cost of PS3 unit itself: due to lower losses on Xbox360, MS could manage to send some extra money to developers making their platform switching easier. Sony couldn't do it (PS2 -> PS3 migration is expensive) and they lost some developer as well as several exclusives lost their exclusivity. (What was pretty much the case on how Sony made PS2 ubiquitous and won against more mature and technically superior Nintendo GameCube)
When building and planning future platform, you have to take many things into consideration. Sony made their bet - but seem to be loosing to competition now: more expensive hardware barred them from many game deals.
Problem is, the store clerks still tell me it IS compatible when actually, it isn't. So, I'd be ticked to spend about $500 just to get home and find it won't play all of my ps2 titles. Frankly, there's not much in the PS3 library I want.
Primarily, I'd like one for the combo of Blu-Ray and full games support, but it isn't going to happen. Bummer!
Oh, I forgot something... Ron is also anti-Blu-Ray.
Exactly! You hit the nail on the head. Every time I see an anti-PS3 or anti-Blu-ray story, it is usually either Don Reisinger or Dave Rosenberg. They write a story every few days on one or the other, and pretty much say the same thing every time.
What is surprising is the shocking amount of sentences that Don Reisinger can start with a conjunction (and, but, etc.). I am not an English professor but who over at Cnet hired this guy? Did they read anything he has written in the past?
Did miss teen South Carolina proof read this for you, Don?
"But perhaps the most...", "But Andrew Rassweiler...", "But when it comes to price...", "And although Sony zealots...", "But with financial troubles...", "And as the recession deepens...", "But when a console...".
Fire yourself or go back to 5th grade English class. Seriously man you are horrible.
I see the Sony/everyone else the same way as Apple/PCs. Apple has a far less market share in the PC market than Sony does in the game console market. Yet, Apple continues to be profitable. A Macintosh computer and the PS3 has several things in common: high quality parts, great Q&A, great UI and great interfaces (HDMI, bluetooth, USB, etc. - all built-in.)
I think everyone should just get their heads out of their *** and come to the realization that being number one is not that important for a company. Apple realizes this. So does Sony. Having a less-than 10-percent market share does not affect availability of software. With the way software is written today, it takes very little effort and funding to re-compile a game for a given platform. You can still be a profitable company by developing niche products. Maybe it is an American mentality thing - I don't know.
I think this Ron dude should refrain from commenting about IT because it is clear that he has some kind of a hatred towards Sony (and I assume Apple and probably every other company that make elite/niche products.) His understandings of Economics 101 is off when it comes to businesses and exactly what their goals are. Even his ideas about American families are so far off-base. He's saying that consumers are too cheap when they purchase gaming consoles - yet 10s of millions of expensive iPods are purchased by the exact same demographics.
It doesn't have to be #1. But Sony PS3 needs the sale numbers of Xbox360 to be profitable. Even if they break even in 2009, they would still need to close the hole left by losses PS3 made in past years.
I don't think it works this way. The PS3 is treated by Sony like cell phones (the service contracts make up for the loss of revenue when giving away the cell phone hardware.) The PS3 is basically a loss leader, and it will always be treated as such. The PS3 is the unit that allowed Blu-ray to win the high-def format war. The loss of revenue in the PS3 is made up with the help if the thousands of other products and services Sony offers, such as their stand-alone Blu-ray boxes and DVD recorders/players, the Sony VAIO laptops, their telecom division, their battery division, their processor division, etc. People have to remember that the PS3 does not "make" Sony. That is like saying Apple exists because of the iPod or iPhone. Many businesses sell key products at a loss, with their other products and services making up for the loss. Not everything needs to be sold for profit.
Well, now everything has been turned on its head, and that Blu-Ray tie-in for the PS-3 doesn't seem so brilliant anymore, as the price has plummeted for entrance into the Blu-Ray player market, but Blu-Ray disks still remain a teeny portion of the overall video market.
Even if Sony lowers the price on PS3, Nintendo has so much room for dropping prices on the Wii, there's no ability for Sony to compete or make any money in the gaming market. That's probably why Sony hasn't bothered to lower prices...there's no point to losing more money if you've already lost the market.
PS3 library easily trumps Wii library.
http://www.metacritic.com/games/ps3/scores/ vs. http://www.metacritic.com/games/wii/scores/ vs. http://www.metacritic.com/games/xbox360/scores/
I'll stick with PS mainly because I have a library of games for PS2 that I can keep playing. The PS2 I bought when the PS3 came out, to replace my N64 that I bought when the Gamecube came out. Is there any reason to pay full price for any of this stuff?
The game library argument is becoming ridiculous, this is not 2006. Sony hasn't marketed all thier great exclusive titles enough.
better portable gaming system:
the Nintendo DS (xbox 360)
OR
the iPhone (PS3)
the PSP (Nintendo Wii) doesn't count!
now go!
Yowza.
I bought my PS2 for $100 new, and I love it. I've put the other $1000 towards other things I want. Like groceires and stuff
From recycling the controller design, to not being efficient in the physical design, with the bloated price tag it is no wonder they failed.
Sony had a bit too much pride, as shown in their lack of interest in an online arena (Xbox Live clearly a winner, here).
The PS3 is like the Dallas Cowboys, the sum of the parts just dont add up to a winner.
I am a huge Sony fan, PS1 & 2 all day long, but the PS3 just didn't cut it for me.
Sticking to the 360 and everything that comes with it.
With any new gadget people who want it would get it. But now that the thrill is gone people are to worry more about money than what they can get out of the system.
The Wii is the most popular console because of the cost, not really for the games that they offer online or by a company.
Once the game companies realize this, and realize that it is OKAY to sell a console at a loss as long as you are going to be able to make it up in game sales...... the industry as a whole will move forward more quickly.
would otherwise consider creating games/exclusives for a platform. Cross platform games by nature are designed to look/feel similar across platforms, noone wants to be accused by fanboys of one system or another of taking "sides" and making their game better on one platform vs another.
Combine this with Sony's high fees for prospective developers, and high royalty rates... and you have a system that will not ( and does not) get much in the way of developer support or exclusives.
Sony bet everything on two concepts, 1 being that developers would somehow pony up the dough to hop on board the PS3 bandwagon if they had made money on the PS2. ( Hasn't happened ) And the second being that nothing else mattered as long as they used PS3 as a level to wint the HD format wars, that getting royalties from every Blu Ray disc produced would be a win in the long term. Well, the second concept may yet prove correct at some point... but as of yet there are no signs of it, the vast majority of people do not care about Blu Ray... and we are also seeing the new wave of the future on services like itunes- HD Dark Knight digital DL anyone?
Bottom line is Sony has set themselves up to fail with the console, and probably only won a Phyrric victory in the HD disc format wars.
If you look at Sony's company culture, it is all about making the most money possible
by treating the consumer like uneducated cattle, even though the machine itself is top notch.
The screen shots are very high quality. BluRay looks stunning.
But I don't need that in a video game to enjoy it. And for most movies I don't care about
the high resolution, even on a 60 inch 1080 screen.
- by robvme December 30, 2008 4:30 PM PST
- "Atul Goyal, analyst with CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets, argues that Sony's gaming business is among the top loss-making businesses for the company, along with LCD TVs and the mobile handset business, and it continues to worsen. What is more shocking, Goyal says, is an apparent lack of communication even within Sony's gaming business.
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Showing 2 of 4 pages (149 Comments)In October, Sony Computer Entertainment of America head Jack Tretton told Thomson Reuters that the PS3 was selling faster than expected and would reach full-year sales targets even if the global economic crisis hurts holiday sales. "We are tracking at 100% up over last year ... about 30% ahead of where we should be," Tretton said in the interview.
However, nearly two weeks later, Kazuo Hirai, president of Sony's game unit, told Bloomberg TV that "I don't think we can meet [our PS3 sales target] easily, but I think we don't have to give it up at this point."
"Interestingly, this statement came out barely two weeks after Jack Tretton, SCE US head said that PS3 sales are 30% better than expected," Goyal wrote in a research note. "We are not sure what the executives intend with these confusing reports or whether there is just no communication between them!"
Sony and Sony Computer Entertainment were not immediately available for comment for this story."
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