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Other Game Bundles For the Cost of the PS3

ImaNumber writes "When Sony announced the price of the PS3 many people were left dumbfounded at how expensive it was going to be. Microsoft joked that people would get the Xbox360 and the Wii instead. Brittlefish has taken this a step further and put together a list of some other gaming 'bundles' that you could buy instead of just getting one PS3. You might be surprised at what you can get for that kind of money."

14 of 149 comments (clear)

  1. Wow... by jamestheprogrammer · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I can see a lot of parents buying this bundle rather than the PS3 for the same price:
    # The "And A Friend" bundle ( $600 ): $250 - Wii $260 - 2 DS Lites $90 - extra Wii-mote and 2 retro controllers (estimate)
    This would be perfect for those common families that make up so much of America with two kids... the two DSs will keep them from constantly saying "Are we there yet?" in the car, and that Wii will keep them entertained at home. And you get all that for the same price of a PS3...
    --
    "You teach a child to read and he or her will be able to pass a literacy test." - President George W. Bush
    1. Re:Wow... by Fishead · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Just curious, do you have kids?

      I have 2 children (3, and 1.5 years old) and although I love them, and like spending time with them, a long road trip can be quite horrible. Children have a VERY short attention span, and the interior of a car is not the easiest place to entertain them. I know I know, they don't need to be entertained 100% of the time, but when you are on a long road trip and they are bored, trust me, electronic entertainment would ROCK.

      Just last weekend we drove 5 hours to see my in-laws, and it was TORTURE (the trip, not the visit... ok, the visit was too a little bit). Part of the problem though was my choice of highway. Instead of the high elevation new highway with the $10 toll, I opted for the road with no toll that winds through arid, desert country. Bad choice! It was 38 for a lot of the way, and I don't have air conditioning!!! I was already planning that when we buy a new(er) minivan, I want some sort of electronic entertainment for the kids to go along with the AC.

    2. Re:Wow... by also-rr · · Score: 3, Funny

      Personally I'm thinking that the WII with a stand made from $400 in cash seems like a pretty interesting option.

  2. No Current-Gen bundle? by Swordsmanus · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I'm suprised he didn't include a PS2 or other "current"-gen home console bundle to take off the edge from the bias in the article.

    Example:

    The "I love Sony Anyway" Bundle: ~$586 Prices are from BestBuy.com unless otherwise noted.

    PS2 ($130)

    Extra controller ($25)

    Guitar Hero ($70)

    God of War ($20)

    Metal Gear Solid 3: Subsistence ($30)

    GTA: Vice City and San Andreas ($40)

    Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 4 ($15)

    Resident Evil 4 ($40)

    NFL 2006 (even though arguably earlier versions are better and cheaper) ($30)

    Shadow of the Collossus ($40)

    Final Fantasy X ($20)

    Burnout 3: Takedown ($20)

    Virtua Fighter 4 ($4 used from Gamestop.com)

    Devil May Cry ($10 used from Gamestop.com)

    World Soccer Winning Eleven 6 Int'l ($20 used from Gamestop.com)

    Gran Turismo 4 ($20)

    NHL 2002 ($2 used from Gamestop.com)

    Metal Gear Solid 2: Substance ($25 used from Gamestop.com)

    Soul Calibur 2 ($15)

    Shipping if buying from gamestop.com ($10+)

    So you can get a collection of outstanding games across all genres instead of a PS3. Of course, if you're already a PS2 owner and own most if not all the games above (and more), then well this won't apply. And don't get me wrong, I don't particuarly love Sony. I actually own mostly Nintendo systems. But I'm suprised there were no current-gen bundles at all. I guess that takes too much effort for a professional web journalist!
  3. Discover! by darkhitman · · Score: 4, Funny

    Buying an XBox 360: $400
    Buying a Wii: $250

    Watching Sony's entire marketing department get sacked: Priceless.

    --
    Tell me something...it's still "We, the people"... right?
  4. Re:More than just a games console? by jrieth50 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why is it constantly necessary to remind Americans that people who might not live in the same country or speak/type in the same English form as you also post here on Slashdot. Centre = center. It's still English, get a clue you ethnocentric prick.

    Sorry, I've been silent after seeing this happen like 3 times today in different threads. Couldn't hold it any longer and I'm fresh out of mod points.

  5. Re:Are you fucking kidding me? by Black+Pete · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So submit some pro-PS3 news then.

    You have to admit that Sony's been doing a pretty good job of shooting themselves in the foot lately, and the lack of positive news about the PS3 reflect this. It's not as if there's a mass media conspiracy to muzzle pro-PS3 news; it's just that the PS3 really is doing that badly.

  6. Re:Are you fucking kidding me? by talksinmaths · · Score: 4, Funny

    Am I going crazy, or are the editors here getting geometrically worse over time?

    No, the editors are only getting linearly worse over time. However, the general quality of the posts (and for that matter, the moderation) is getting exponentially worse, so maybe that's where the confusion comes from. :-)

    --
    Don't you have someone you'd die for?
  7. Re:Well now... by Babbster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's just the way things are being talked about all over. The idea that Zonk/Slashdot has some inherent anti-Sony bias may be true, but the Zonk-haters out there would be hard-pressed to find new articles out there talking about how great the PS3 will be and how Sony is giving gamers a great gift with its released.

    What folks don't seem to understand is that Slashdot isn't a news generator. It's a news linker. It would be exactly like getting upset at Google because a search generates negative press about the PS3. If anyone is to blame, it's Sony and the writers of the linked articles. But, then again, maybe the people here at Slashdot subscribe to the "If you don't have anything nice to say..." philosophy...you know, until they get a chance to bash something they dislike.

    Personally, I hope that the PS3 turns out to be a kick-ass game console that, after a year or so, I'm ready and willing to buy. Until that happens, though, it seems too expensive for its intended purpose, and I'll be purchasing other game systems in the meantime.

  8. Realistic Gamer Dad Package by Ratbert42 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Used N64 and 10 games: $50
    TV for the kids to play N64 on: $100
    Lock for the kid's room: $20
    Gamecube: $70
    Three decent adult Gamecube games: $100
    Beer and chips: $60
    Earrings to shut the wife up: $200

  9. Re:Are you fucking kidding me? by Cutriss · · Score: 3, Informative

    Or maybe it's just that you're a PS3 fanboy? I mean, you've made no secret of it.

    Moderators should feel free to check NineNine's posting history to see where he's said that he thinks the PS3 is the best console by far and that the Wii is still "kiddy" and the 360 has no compelling content etc etc etc.

    This particular post comes to mind.

    --
    "Mod, mod, mod...and another troll bites the dust."
  10. Interesting... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You've just given me an idea of my criteria for buying a PS3:

    • Price drops significantly, on both the PS3 and the games. I should be able to get a high-end PS3, a game, and a blu-ray movie for under $400.
    • Sony backs down significantly on DRM. I'm not talking "Oops, sorry about the rootkit," I'm talking something huge, like making a blu-ray player for Linux, or releasing the keys needed to decode blu-ray content. Or I'm talking about some high-level people, like Ken Kutaragi, saying "Oops, we fucked up, time to completely redesign Sony". Remember when Novell bought Ximian, and Ximian culture spread through Novell? Maybe if Sony bought Novell...
    • Linux on the PS3 must be at least usable (Gnome/KDE, Firefox...) and ideally it should kick ass. I want real homebrew games on the thing. It doesn't have to be all open-source, but at the very least, a good OpenGL. Or, much better, open it up to the point where even if PS3 Linux isn't a dev kit yet, it should be possible to develop an OSS devkit on top of it.
    • Everything must be upgradable. And not just from sony. I should be able to buy an off the shelf IDE/SATA or USB drive and use it instead of the onboard one. 60 gigs is going to start looking pretty small, pretty fast -- if my brother can fill 15 gigs with UT2003 mods 3 years ago, I can fill 60 gigs with high-def mods today.
    • It must be possible to run games off the hard disk. Not just downloadable games, not just "supported" games, but any damn game I buy at the store. The way to do this is easy, if they've been doing anything like it from the beginning -- force games to run on Linux, then all you have to do is change the game startup script.
    • It must hook up to ordinary, existing monitors via DVI and VGA, and it must play high-def content if the monitor can handle it -- no HDMI crap, full resolution, no matter what the hell I hook it up to. I'm not a pirate, I have a great monitor, but it doesn't have HDMI.
    • Don't just rip off the Wii controller (badly), don't just whine about how you're not really ripping it off, but actually go to Nintendo, say "We're sorry, could we please, please, pretty-please license your controller?"

    In short, if they want to market it as a Linux computer, then it had better be a Linux computer.

    And even if they give me all that, I'm still going to wait a bit to either see some amazing Qemu speed, or to see enough good, cheap games for the PS3 to make me want to get it instead of upgrades for my desktop. After all, for $500, you can still get quite a lot of computer, especially as an upgrade.

    And of course, remember, Halo 3 and Zelda are pretty compelling reasons not to buy a PS3, even if you are a hardcore console gamer.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  11. Re:More than just a games console? by EGSonikku · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "This Sony product is cheap compared to this other Sony product!" is not a very valid point when Sony controls the pricing on both.

    I rather imagine this is how it happened at Sony HQ (in the land of Mordor, on the slopes of Mount Doom...)


    [SONY EXEC A] We may have a difficult time selling the PS3 at $600 ...


    [SONY EXEC B] Hey! Iv'e got an idea! Lets just charge $1000 for our Blu-Ray player that no one will buy! By *comparison* the PS3 seems incredibly cheap!


    [SONY EXEC A] Great idea! In fact, we don't even *need* to make the standalone player! We just announce it and a price and keep delaying it untill after the PS3 is out! It's whole point in life will just be to sit there and look expensive next to the PS3!


    [SONY EXEC B] BRILLIANT! Lets go make some hats out of money and torture some kittens.

    --
    - "Scientia non habet inimicum nisp ignorantem"
  12. Re:Purposefully wrong comparison by Londovir · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'll grant you that your point about the comparison being flawed is legitimate. But, I'll also say you're missing the point, perhaps. I worked at Toys "R" Us for almost 10 years, first as a department head in RZone (videogames/electronics), then as a store manager. I was there for everything from the very tail end (IE, it's dead, Jim) of SNES/Genesis up to PS2/XBox/GC.

    You know what I noticed in all of those years? The bulk of our shoppers fall into what I'd call the "clueless" demographic. They come to buy a system as a gift, or for their home, and they generally are shopping for some kids, somewhere. They looked at 2 things almost every time: the price tag, and the endcap display unit. That's about it. They didn't look at specs, or feature lists, or future expandability.

    A typical shopping experience would be as follows: Shopper comes into the area, strolls around, stands watching the endcap displays (and occassionally plays one), then walks over to the display case to get the skinny on the cost. Usually they'll ask a couple of basic questions (how many controllers in the box, what kind of plug-ins do I need, etc). Now, the thing is, most of these were parents (maybe grandparents) and they wanted to get the most for their money. Plain and simple. They know that the kids/teens are looking to rip that sucker open, chuck in a game (not movie), and get pwning on some n00b.

    I think maybe 3 times in 10 years did I run into a shopper who truly knew, or wanted to know, all of the particulars about a system. I would be astounded to be discussing polygon counts, resolutions, DVD/CD speeds, etc, with a shopper. Usually it was the same-old, same-old: I have $400, how can I get a machine with the most games. Or, perhaps, they would ask about backwards compatibility (now that's the one place I'll grant the PS3 will probably be more attractive).

    So, here's my take. I think the kind of bundles mentioned in the article are going to be the exact sort of mental processes going on in most shoppers, whether you think it's a fair comparison or not. I know shoppers - I was PAID to know shoppers. People like quantity, especially when they're spending that much money. To spend $600 (or $500 even) and just walk home with a box with a machine and 1 controller, but no game, is going to be a serious case of sticker shock for a lot of "regular" shoppers. Especially when people could likely buy an XB360 (which might be $399 by then, never know) and a game, or a Wii and 2 or 3 games. HDMI? Half the "regular" shoppers won't even be able to use that. A large hard drive? That is relatively meaningless to many shoppers - witness the continued popularity of PS2 without one versus an XBox with one. (That was a major training point by Microsoft for us retailers: hype the hard drive and it's possibilities. It'll make sales. Never did.)

    And as for BluRay? Why is that relevant to a majority of shoppers? I can tell you that when PS2 came out, DVD playback was never a major selling point at all. It will generally always be the case that a dedicated machine will be more feature enriched and [once a generation has passed] cost far less than a do-it-all machine. I'll grant you that a PS3 will be cheaper than a standalone BluRay for a relative time, but I will also say it's more than likely that given a year, perhaps, a BluRay player will probably drop down to the same (or less) than a PS3, and will also likely end up with more features. It's just common consumer electronics history. We rarely sold PS2s because they could -also- play DVDs - people wanted a videogame machine, plain and simple. (Ask XBox how that whole DVD Playback kit deal ended up...)

    The PS3 is trying to do too much, and stuffing BluRay into it is the one thing which will cause it to lose perhaps 30% of the potential sales it could have had. Sony could have gone with HD-DVD, had the advantage of launching AFTER the XB360, and they would have been able to nearly match the XB360 price. PLUS they would have had better backwards compatibility

    --
    Londovir