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#1 |
Blu-ray Duke
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Do you think they would have designed the PS3 a little differently? Now obviously we are all fans of the PS3 and love it exactly the way it is. However let's face it, Sony decision to make the PS3 such a high end gaming console has cost them this generation. It has cost them market share, it has cost them a lot of money (despite the high price tag), etc. My question is, if Sony had to do it all over again, would they change anything and if so what do you think those changes would have been?
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#2 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Looking back... the PS3 really didn't need a memory card reader. It is nice to have but I've barely used mine. That would have cut the price there. Sony shouldn't have launched with two models. I thought that was a mistake from the start.
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#3 |
Banned
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What made the PS3 so expensive at first was the BD drive. They could have went with a standard DVD drive and been successful (just look at the 360). I honestly think Sony thought they were untouchable in the game market, and used that to further BD as a format. It's really a catch-22... If the PS3 hadn't been BD, BD may not have won the format war, or at least not as quickly. On the other hand, had Sony went with a less expensive DVD drive, the PS3 may have done better initially.
By the way, I wouldn't call myself a "fan" of the PS3 or say I love it exactly the way it is. Gamewise, the Playstation brand has (IMHO) gone downhill since the PSone. In saying that I'm not intending to single out Sony, I think game developemnent has been extremely stagnant across the board for a couple of generations now. I like all te current machines equally, for different reasons. That said, I like all of today's consoles only a fraction as much as the original Playstation, the Sega Dreamcast or even the Genesis/Sega CD. I would have liked a new standard controller. For me, that is the Playstation's biggest weakness. The controller is too small, the buttons have no feel to them and the analog sticks are in completely the wrong positions. Last edited by OG Pooh; 01-29-2011 at 03:47 PM. |
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#4 | |
Moderator
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I personally think the BD drive was a great idea. Considering games are on BD. It holds way much more data compared to DVD as I'm sure you may know. Whereas Final Fantasy XIII was on 3 discs compared to the one disc we have for PS3. Even Dead Space 2 on Xbox is on 2 discs. I'm not countering anything you're saying I just think the BD Drive was a good idea. Sure it may of hurt sales in the beginning since it was so expensive but considering where were at now, I think it was good move. Everyone has their own preferences, I don't have a problem with the controller. It has never once bothered me or felt awkward to hold. Maybe it's just after playing Xbox the PS3 controller seems weird. I don't think the Analog sticks are too close and I have never bumped my fingers together because of it. |
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#5 |
Gaming Moderator
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Actually, I always thought that during the HD optical media wars, Sony could have swung things in BD's favor much earlier, if they had put some PS3 guts into a component that looked like a DVD player, included an AV style remote control, and marketed it as a Blu-ray disc player that you could ALSO play games on, rather than a gaming console that looked like a console and also played movies. I think the price point of the PS3 was very competetive among BD and HDDVD players, but many simply did not want a game console, for a variety of different reasons. Those who were reluctant because they worried about obsolescence would have had those fears allayed. Seriously, the PS3 was a first generation BD movie player, and it has been able to remain up to date into the 3D era. Nothing else can come close.
Furthermore, the PS3, especially the fat PS3, looks more like a toy than an AV component, which certainly turned some off. |
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#6 | |
Banned
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Yes, the controller thing in a personal opinion. I do think that the general preference leans toward the 360 type controller nowadays. If you browse the web at all, you'll find lots of discussion regarding this preference, but hardly any the other way around. Also, quite a few converters have poped up to allow 360 controllers to be used on the PS3, but I haven't seen any (that I remember) that let a PS3 controller be used on a 360. There's just no demand for it. As for jsteinhauer's comments... I agree completely. I have always wished that game consoles looked more like regualr A/V components & less like toys. If manufatureres want them to be taken seriously, they have to stop making them the red-headed stepchildren of the component world. Last edited by OG Pooh; 01-29-2011 at 04:11 PM. |
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#7 |
Blu-ray Duke
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I agree with this. Don't get me wrong. I love blu ray and I am glad that it won the format war. However was it worth it to Sony to lose SO much market share from one generation to another? Remember, the PS2 is the all time highest selling console. It had a userbase of 140 million! Was winning the HD format war worth losing nearly 2/3 of your market share this gen? Yes I realize this gen is not over yet and Sony will continue to grow their current userbase. However it's highly unlikely the PS3 will ever approach PS2 numbers, nor is it likely they will ever completely re-gain the financial losses they sustained from the cost of developing PS3. I know hindsight is 20/20 but I believe that if Sony had launched the PS3 at 399.99 with a dvd drive and put a little more R&D in their online infastructure from the beginning instead of investing so much in blu ray, the gaming landscape might look a lot different today.
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#8 | |
Moderator
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#9 |
Banned
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Thinking about it a little more, I think where the PS3 is at a real disadvantage is when you start comparing PSN to Live. Live is set up much better, more well organized & better maintained. PSN feels real haphazzard in comparison. Kind of like You're online, good luck. I'm the first to admit that I am not an online gamer. I highly prefer the one-player experience and tend to gravitate towards one-player type games. But for people who are into the online aspects, Live is far superior to PSN, and that is a big selling point circa 2011. Of course, Microsoft being who they are, have a big advantage when it comes to online setup.
Last edited by OG Pooh; 01-29-2011 at 04:48 PM. |
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#10 |
Special Member
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One thing I know they would do differently is launch the system with the dualshock 3 instead of the rumbleless sixaxis. As for the bd drive, I think they would launch it with one even though it drove the price up initially. The PS3 is the main reason that bd won the format war, plus it really gives game developers a lot more options when designing games. One thing they might do differently is use more standard "off the shelf" CPU/GPU components in the system. I love the cell processer as much as anyone, but from everything I've read it can be a royal pain in the ass to develop on and I know that a lot of devs hated it early on. If they would have used something more familiar to the industry, it would have helped early games look a lot better when compared to the xbox and it would have helped keep costs down
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#11 | |
Gaming Moderator
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This^ is why NGP is already a hit with devs! Easy to develop for! 1 week to port a ps3 game! Ease of progremming will win over any dev to a new console. Something Ken forgot about in his stuborness. Now we have Kazuo Hirai at the helm the only way is up! ![]() Last edited by Mavrick; 01-29-2011 at 05:21 PM. |
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#12 | |
Gaming Moderator
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And lets not forget Old Kens infamous quotes!
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#13 |
Banned
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One of the biggest mistakes Sony made was announcing that the ps3 would be expensive to the point where it would cost people 3 full weeks pay if they wanted one, such a stupid comment scared a lot of people off before the console was even released.
Another big mistake was how differently the price of the console varied from country to country. Here in Australia when the ps3 was 1st released it had a price tag off $999au but it was only $599 in the U.S. Based on the value of the Australian dollar at the time we should have had a price tag of around $725au, which is $125 more than the U.S not $400. Plus we also were paying a much higher price for ps2 backwards compatibility which was done by software not hardware like some other regions had at the time (I understand that other countries went on to receive ps2 backwards compatibility via software but was quite a few months after Australia), but for $999au a lot of Australian's felt that we should have been getting exactly the same product as other countries for that kind of money. Last edited by Cevolution; 01-29-2011 at 06:37 PM. |
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#14 | |
Power Member
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Last edited by Psx0005; 01-29-2011 at 07:43 PM. |
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#17 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Coming from 360 and xbox live to psn, I don't see a difference in online gaming at all.
399 is the highest price point for a new system, anything more and you're asking for doom. Sent from my rooted EVO running CM6.1.2 using Tapatalk |
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#18 |
Blu-ray Prince
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Sony overdesigned the PS3 and got cocky, thinking the market would lap up anything they released. I really don't believe Sony saw the Wii and Xbox360 as any kind of threat, which in retrospect was a huge mistake. The decision to use CELL processing as the basis for the system was too soon. Choosing Blu-ray was an integrated strategy with all divisions of Sony, to help create a new home video standard to replace DVD.
I doubt they make all the same decisions if they had known how the market was going to develop. |
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#19 |
Gaming Moderator
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Pricing can be dificult. It cant be judged on a 5 year old consoles price. Inflation and rising taxes are the biggest problem.
![]() A snes was £300 at launch. If it were released today it would be around £600. a cinema ticket cost me £3.50 10 years ago. Today its £10.50! I think home consoles lifespans need to be extended past the 10 year life cycle. Useually around 5-6 years in next gen is anounced the year after its rel eased. then a 3-4 year period after the announcement until the old gen is left behind. We are only A YEAR away from the probable anouncements of the "next gen" of consoles and 2 away from their release. If it was extended to 15 years say, they could use the extra time to get production costs down meaning a cheaper launch price. Personally I could quite hAPPily carry on with PS3 another 4 years before even wanting a next gen console. |
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#20 |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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I think they might have gone with the revised model (no card readers, no PS2 compatibility) but I don't think they would have done more. Also the Wii sold incredibly well, but it sold to the none-gaming market, if you look at the gaming market the PS3 did not do badly, it did almost as well as the PS2.
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