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Nintendo, Sony Start Handheld Gaming Battle At E3

An anonymous reader writes "There's a Wired News article up discussing the fight for handheld game console supremacy starting at next week's E3 Expo. According to Wired News, 'Nintendo, the biggest seller of video-game consoles 15 years ago, once again faces a tough street fight against Sony, the upstart that stole much of the video-game business with its PlayStation. This time, the fight is over handheld video-game machines, and if Nintendo loses, it could be in serious trouble.' It explains: 'Nintendo is expected to give peeks at its next-generation handheld system -- code-named the DS -- while Sony will release more information about its PSP. Both companies will be vying for the hearts and minds of gamers and -- more importantly -- software developers.' Who's gonna win?" Slashdot Games recently ran a related story that has developers and journalists analyzing the showdown to come.

20 of 330 comments (clear)

  1. Well... by chrispyman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If I remember correctly, didn't Nintendo say that the DS is not a sequel to the GBA? Besides, one of the real selling points of the GBA (and PS2) was that it could play every single Game Boy game ever released since the system debuted in the late 80s, and thats certainly a negative for Sony's PSP.

    1. Re:Well... by mrgreen4242 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If I remember correctly, didn't Nintendo say that the DS is not a sequel to the GBA?

      Regardless of wether that is the case or not, it is going to be perceived as the sequel to the GBA. It is going to have the GameBoy name, and be a new handheld from the Nintendo. People will naturally assume it is the next GB. As a comparison, look at the GBA SP and how many times you had to tell people it was EXACTLY the same inside as the GBA, just a different case w/ a backlight and built in batter.

      Also, if this is NOT a 'sequel' to the GBA, then they are introducing a device that will directly compete with their other products. Wether this would be a negative factor I'm not sure. I'd be curious to see how non-SP GBAs are selling now.

      Lastly, is there any info yet on the backward compatibility of the DS? I agree with the parent poster, that backwards compatibility will probably make or break the system. Remember the Virtual Boy? That wasn't a direct sequel to the GB, but an addition to the line, and it failed miserably, mostly because it was a radically different platform to develop for, and had 0 installed game base, which makes it hard to sell systems, which in turn make it hard to get developers to produce games, which in turn, etc etc...

      In an already crowded video game market it is going to be rough to get a new system off the ground. If the DS is backward compatible with the GB/A, it will probably sell well, if priced right. If not, it's going to be a tough sell when there are so many other options out there.

      The PSP will have success based on 1) (in the short term) Sony/PS fanboys who will buy it and all the launch games just because, and 2) (in the long run) how easy it ends up being to port PS games to it. If a developer can take a PS1 game, run it thru a magical Sony PSP compiler setup and have a nearly ready to ship PSP game, it will be an easy way to build up a library of good games fast, and put a huge dent into Nintendo's handheld market.

      Or I could be full of shit, who knows.

      Rob

  2. Re:Like always... by The+Other+White+Boy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    my Dreamcast and Saturn beg to differ.

  3. Game play Length by nickroethemeier · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Although I don't see either of these devices going the way of the Game Gear, They have to have simple, fun games or they will die. Its flat and simple. Most people only play hand held games for short bursts, and they play console games for hours on end (Final Fantasy). The puzzle games of old (tetris) had it right. Simple, Fun, Short.

    1. Re:Game play Length by lotsofno · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Most people only play hand held games for short bursts
      You're forgetting GBA's great selection of RPGs.. Final Fantasy Tactics Advance? Zelda? Sword of Mana? Fire Emblem? Shining Soul 2? Mario and Luigi? And of course, Pokemon? Nintendo has developed a HUGE following off quality titles like these that aren't only portable, but able to stand up next to their console counterparts.
  4. Obvious Winner by $lingBlade · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sorry to state the obvious, but the winner will be us as consumers. For once we'll have two powerful companies fighting for our money with products that kick butt.

  5. fight it out! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny


    Nintendo, Sony Start Handheld Gaming Battle At E3

    Nintendo rolls a 16, hitting with the Vorpal Blade!
    Sony makes the saving throw and takes 8 HP of damage!
    Sony casts a Magic Missile spell at Nintendo and hits for 6 HP!
    Nintendo hits Sony with the Vorpal Blade again, with an 18 roll!
    Sony fails the saving throw, Sony loses its head!

  6. Re:Like always... by kisrael · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The system with the best games will win.

    Uh, given how one gamer's "best" is another gamer's "complete waste of bits", this is a meaningless statement.

    And if you think time-to-market and name brand recognition don't play a major role, you're nuts. There's a ton of other factors to. (In particular, I think certain genres make or break systems as much as particular games.)

    I'd cite examples, but than my rampant fanboyism might show through.

    --
    SO YOU'RE GOING TO DIE: The Comic for Dealing with Death
  7. A little hard to compare by Painaxl · · Score: 4, Informative

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't the DS a side project, and NOT Nintendo's actual follow up to the GBA? Calling it Nintendo's "next generation handheld" implies that it's a replacement for the GBA, which I'm pretty sure is not what it is intended to be.

  8. Just imagine if Microsoft came out with a handheld by vosbert · · Score: 5, Funny

    It'll be complete with a hard drive, cpu, cpu fan, and disk drive. It'll be the size of a briefcase and weigh about 10 pounds. It'll also come in handy as a bludgeon.

  9. And the truth is... by clichekiller · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There are enough people out there who will buy both to keep both companies happy.

    Also, in a way, they go after two different markets. The Gameboy is poised for the younger crowd, with their Pokemon and such. This isn't to say there are no good games for adults, Advance War I & II come to mind, just that I see more GB, GBC, and GBA in the hands of little kids then I do adults. The PS2 will almost certainly go after the older teen market and adults.

    And ask yourself how many of you own more then one gaming console. I used to own a Gamecube, XBox, PS2, and Dreamcast. I know of plenty of other people who own at least two. So I don't believe Nintendo is in that big of a trouble, if they can keep their niche alive and prevent the PSP from encroaching they should be fine.

    --
    Sir, there is a dragon outside with an armful of armor. He's inquiring if we offer free refills.
  10. Hint to Sony by stratjakt · · Score: 5, Interesting

    RCA Video and Audio out jacks. You can find the real estate for it.

    I should be able to plug into any TV with convenient front a/v jacks and play up on the big screen.

    The A/V hack for GBA is by far the coolest, IMO. Build this functionality in, don't try to sucker me by offering me a 60 dollar addon for a 100 dollar console to play my games on TV (GBA player).

    I'd spend so much more time playing the games (and consequently buy more games) at home on the TV. As it stands, GBA is good to occupy you while you take a dump, but it's not something you sit down to play.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
  11. Re:Like always... by Gldm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And how do you get the best games?

    Back in the day when Playstation was new, everyone thought Sony had gone absolutely insane entering the console market because they'd made almost no good games for existing consoles.

    But what they did instead was interesting. Sony made alot of programming tools for the PS and helped developers make games on it. Sega's Saturn was technically more powerful but a pain in the ass to program for, and Sega kept all the best secrets to themselves for their own games. Nintendo 64 was much more powerful, but stayed on the expensive cartridge format and Nintendo liked to have control over who could make what for the system, both of which scared off many developers. Sony didn't have a reason to keep secrets or keep other software developers behind them, as they didn't really have their own software divisions worried about keeping an edge over competition. It was only later when games like Gran Turismo came out that Sony started making decent games themselves.

    I think Nintendo's going to lose this fight just because they're too used to getting their way and ruling their software library with an iron fist. Granted it's lightened up a bit since the SNES bloodless Mortal Kombat days, but I think Sony's just going to bring more developers to the market with them.

    --

    Introducing the new Occam Fusion! Now with sqrt(-1) fewer blades!

  12. N-Gage? by mgs1000 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Meanwhile, Nokia huddles in a corner and cries...

  13. This is largely a misconception.. by JMZero · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Systems with better games get purchased. This is true. But this is not causation.

    The root is that good games are developed for good hardware that's released at the right time with the right marketing effort. Developers create launch titles for systems that they think will do well (or that pay them). At launch, consumers buy systems that have good hardware.

    The NGage wasn't dead because it didn't have game support - it didn't have game support because it was a horrible platform.

    Conversely, you can't tell me that the PS2 had good games at launch - and yet it sold like hot cakes. Why? Because it was the right hardware at the right time - with the right marketing accompanying that hardware.

    As a console matures, the two re-inforce each other. Good games get made for successful hardware, and those quality games in turn make that hardware more successful. There are anomalies here - like Nintendo's guaranteed quality first-party titles or Street Fighter II selling SNES's - but in general they hide the real truth.

    The PSP/DS fight will be fought mostly on hardware. The DS should have a guaranteed lead going in in terms of software support (Metroid, Zelda, Mario...) - but I think it'll squander that marginal advantage by being silly hardware.

    The much more conventional PSP will end up being the system that's more successful and has better games - but the latter doesn't cause the former. Both will be caused by it being a better platform.

    --
    Let's not stir that bag of worms...
  14. Sony does this by fahrvergnugen · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sony's PR department has a history of doing this sort of thing.

    Dreamcast is about to ship? Announce the PS2. Show clips of amazing rendered video being run through an Emotion Engine chip, and claim it's being generated in realtime by a Playstation 2. Claim a near release date. Get everyone so excited about the PS2 that they're willing to wait. Push the release date back once it gets too near.

    PS2 Ships. Aside from SSX, launch games are a crushing disappointment, as not one of them beyond this title demonstrates clear technical superiority to the aging Dreamcast, despite the huge gap in their release dates.

    X-Box ships. X-Box Live! ships. Christmas buying season approaches. Sony announces the PS3. Talk about the fantastic power of grid processing and cell chips. Imply that the backward compatability of the PS2 will also be in the PS3.

    Nintendo ships GBA SP. Sony announces PSP in concept, claims a near release date. Push back as release date approaches.

    Nintendo is about to announce portable dual-screen system. Sony re-hypes PSP, releases a few more tidbits of detail, the tech press predictably goes rabid.

    Gamers decide to wait for the PSP.

    As gamers, how long are we going to put up with this shit from Sony? Haven't we learned from our mistakes by now?

    PSP is vapor, and shitty vapor at that, until proven otherwise.

    --
    Even Jesus hates listening to Creed.
    1. Re:Sony does this by cowscows · · Score: 4, Insightful
      The difference between sony's hype and nintendo's hype has always amused me. Sony talks about numbers and cinematic graphics and whatnot, and the fancy technologies built into the hardware while Nintendo talks about trying to get developers excited about the possibilities of two screens, or their new controller design, with certain buttons being prioritized, and how that might lead to new types of games.

      Maybe I'm just being naive, but it makes me believe that Nintendo, as a company, just might have a better philosophy and culture in regards to gaming.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

  15. Re:Like always... by drzhivago · · Score: 4, Interesting

    It's pretty funny that the Playstation 2 has done as well as it has. Yes, you're right, the PSX was much easier to develop for than the Saturn. With the PS2 though, development was much more difficult than even the Saturn.

    Regardless, there are 2 factors you didn't take into account: time to market, and cost of games. Since the PSP is essentially a mini-PS2, complete with large capacity discs, the overall development time and cost for PSP games will be substantially larger than for GBA games. Longer development time = less games. To offset the larger incurred costs, expect PSP games to be on-average more similar to it's console brethren than portable competitors. I think those 2 factors will determine whether the PSP (and DS possibly) succeeds. I wouldn't be surprised if at the end of the day, the GBA is still left standing as the winner, even against a system from the same company.

  16. It's all about battery life by realmolo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Nintendo and their Gameboys have stayed on top for 2 reasons: lots of games, and long battery life.

    None of the other competitors in handhelds have had these 2 things. Yes, there have been more powerful handhelds. But they didn't have games, or the battery-life sucked.

    Sony will have the games, no doubt. And from what I've read about the PSP, they'll have good battery-life, too. Not to mention really, really powerful hardware (for a handheld). So Nintendo may be in for a battle.

    As far as Nintendo and their flagship titles/characters- Does anyone really care about Mario or Zelda or Pokemon anymore? They're good games, but I think burnout has really set-in for most gamers when it comes to the Nintendo brands.

    That said, I love my GBA. Best system Nintendo has had since the original NES, if you ask me.

  17. Journalism errors by M.C.+Hampster · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm not even past the first few paragraphs, and I've already found errors:

    In fact, the Game Boy Advance is carrying a lot of water for the company, since the GameCube, Nintendo's flagship gaming console, is rapidly falling behind the PlayStation and Microsoft Xbox in sales.

    Since when is the GameCube rapidly falling behind the XBox in sales?

    In case you haven't been in close proximity to any 12-year-olds in the past five years, the Nintendo Game Boy Advance is a $100 portable game device the size of a slice of bread.

    Wrong. The Game Boy Advance SP is $100, the normal Game Boy Advance runs around $70.

    I guess we've all just gotten so used to the mainstream media just getting their facts wrong that people don't even notice anymore.

    --
    Forget the whales - save the babies.