JP 360 Stock Moves Slowly
Omkar writes "According to Kotaku, the Xbox 360's price has been cut to a mere $150 by several Japanese retailers. Apparently they can't send unsold inventory back to Microsoft, so they're desperate to free up space." Indeed, Next Generation reports that something like 60% of all Japanese stock goes unsold. However, 1up has found that the price cuts aren't the whole story. The price cuts aren't because of consumer interest, but a result of specially priced bundles. From that article: "... this is simple another example of Japan's hardware bundling practices. So, although the 360 isn't selling as quickly as it did in North America (about 28% of the units shipped have been sold so far, according to a Bloomberg report), the photo doesn't indicate that prices were slashed after launch day as some sort of desperate measure - it means that Japan has bundled offers that are just as annoying as the ones we have in North America."
Since I the Japanese don't want them, I'd be happy to pick up a couple for $150. There's a lot of morons here in the States that will still pay $700-900 for a 360.
So, it turns out that the systems haven't been "cut to a mere $150" but instead are being advertised at that price for a promotional bundle with Internet service. Given that you have a link with the correct story, what is the point of including the nonsensical one?
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
The problem with Japanese sales is the lack of a great blockbuster. There has only been 6 titles released for them: Perfect Dark Zero, Ridge Racer 6, Need for Speed: Most Wanted, Every Party, FIFA 06: Road to FIFA World Cup and Tetris: The Grandmaster Ace.
It's a shame that Microsoft is waiting until the release of PS3 before releasing Halo3. If they had released H3 with the 360 they might have done better in Japan, but hey who is really broken up about it?
Peter Corcoran
It's not the bundles that are the problem. They just aren't including the right things respective to the native audience.
Throw in a couple pairs of used schoolgirl panties and some tentacle mangas and you'll have a hit.
At current supply levels it will be a while before you can just go to a western shop and pickup a 360.
That I think is very telling that right now the 360 is not a hot item in japan.
Of course there is one tiny little difference. It is the holiday season in the west, the time to give expensive gifts to your loved ones or even your kids.
Do the japanese have a similar season or have they adopted christmas for that purpose?
I find MS comments that hopefully DOA4 will cause sales to pickup funny. If you cannot shift a mere 150.000 consoles in japan on launch you have lost that market. Maybe the japanese are just upset at being last this time. Usually it is the EU that has to wait.
Anyway who cares. Instead of constantly chasing a market you cannot win focus on the US and EU market. Better OWN those markets totally instead of wasting resources on a half-assed conquest of japan. It is the smallest of the 3 markets.
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
I guess the Japanese are smarter when it comes to gaming.
Buying a system on release is practically useless beyond the "hey, guess what I have!" factor: hardly any games, high prices, and first-generation bugs/issues.
Even if you really want an Xbox360, there's no reason not to wait. The games that are actually worth playing won't be out for a while yet, and the release catalogue is laughable. Having the system early only gets you some negative cashflow.
Now, don't think I'm some Nintendo fanboy or Microsoft detractor. There's no reason to buy ANY system on launch unless it has a decent game catalogue.
IMHO, the people spending thousands on Xboxe360s on Ebay are fools. Maybe if Halo were already released...
GeekNights!
Late Night Radio for Geeks!
So 360's are sold bundled in Japan. Fair enough. Are PS2's sold bundled in Japan? If they are, how much slower are 360 bundles being sold than PS2 bundles? Don't give me "percentage unsold" -- that's horrendously misleading.
Well, the thing about this whole bundling issue is that it's not a forced thing. You can either walk out of a store with an Xbox 360 for $330 or you can buy one for $150 with a year of net service. This is pretty common in Japan, but the point is the choice is still there. It is not like bundling here, where you have to take what the store wants to give you. (I'm not even sure that would be legal in Japan.)
So the real deal is that the Xbox 360 still isn't selling. It's not like all 80,000 or whatever of the unsold consoles are unsold because people didn't want to sign up for internet access at the same time. If a customer doesn't want that bundle, they're free to buy one without it. They're choosing not to. That's the story here.