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Gamers Don't Know Their Own Consoles

deadmantyping writes "Ars Technica reports on a survey of 6,260 responses which indicates that only 40 percent of PS3 owners knew that their console included Bluray. Apparently a large portion of gamers aren't aware of the non-gaming capabilities of their systems. Ars speculates that this might help explain Nintendo's apparent dominance in the console market since their introduction of the Wii."

68 of 303 comments (clear)

  1. What? by lattyware · · Score: 5, Funny

    They bought a PS3 without realizing it had blu-ray?

    Dear god... They must be mad.

    --
    -- Lattyware (www.lattyware.co.uk)
    1. Re:What? by evil+agent · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yeah, wtf? It's almost as if they bought it to just play video games...

      --
      End transmission.
    2. Re:What? by lattyware · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeah, Crazy, a PS3 for video games, everyone knows it can't do that well!

      --
      -- Lattyware (www.lattyware.co.uk)
    3. Re:What? by ArmitageX · · Score: 5, Funny

      No, not really. You can be stupid and still own a console- just ask most of the Halo and Halo 2 playerbase...

      --
      [[]] Don't get your bikini in a bundle, I'm just chlorinating the gene pool. [[]]
    4. Re:What? by FauxPasIII · · Score: 5, Funny

      > Yeah, wtf? It's almost as if they bought it to just play video games...

      If they bought a PS3 planning to use it to play video games, they're really going to be mad.

      --
      25% Funny, 25% Insightful, 25% Informative, 25% Troll
    5. Re:What? by 9Nails · · Score: 2, Funny

      I would assume that they bought it to sell on eBay for profit. But the PS3 buying firestorm has cooled and nobody can make the fast buck. So they just kept it instead of selling for a loss.

      Just a theory.

    6. Re:What? by Rod+Beauvex · · Score: 4, Funny

      Um, that's a retractable cupholder. Duh.

    7. Re:What? by cinderblock · · Score: 3, Funny

      It's like not knowing that your computer can play CD's. WHAT? It can!?
    8. Re:What? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      Well, one difference is that most of us have dozens of CDs, and not one Blue-Ray disk.

    9. Re:What? by th3rmite · · Score: 3, Interesting

      For real, my wife was trying to get me to buy her a PS3 to complement her Wii and Xbox360, and I told her that when she can give me a list of 5 games that she wanted for it that aren't on the 360, THEN I'd buy it for her.

      That was 6 months ago...

    10. Re:What? by revengebomber · · Score: 2, Funny

      I hope not. You'd have a hard time stuffing your drink into the slot-loading drive.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    11. Re:What? by IDontAgreeWithYou · · Score: 4, Funny

      I call shenanigans!!! You really expect us to believe that A)You have a wife and B)SHE is bugging YOU to get another game console. Sorry, that is just too much.

      --
      Finding other idiots on /. that agree with your opinion doesn't make it any less stupid.
    12. Re:What? by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 2, Insightful
      plus a woman who owns a Wii and a 360, yet is in the 19th century in terms of being financial bitch to her husband?

      Did you slap her face and tell her to get the fuck back into the kitchen where she belongs?

      Or did you quickly deflate her and put her back in the cupboard before your mom came down to the basement?

  2. Of course not by GeckoX · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Blu-Ray isn't ubiquitous, no HD format is yet. There's nary a Blu-Ray market out there at this point, not something most people even know exists unless they go looking for it.

    If blockbuster all of a sudden is half full of Blu-Ray disks, people will become very aware of the PS3's capabilities, just as they did with the PS2.

    PS2 was a huge driving factor in the final surge of DVD uptake...but DVD's were known to all by that point.

    People certainly read on the box that the PS3 supports Blu-Ray, but it means nothing except to very few. The HDDVD addon for the 360 is in a worse boat as that is it's ONLY function.

    Me, I'm just waiting for Blu-Ray to catch on (or not). If it does, I'll buy a PS3, and it'll be my HD player of choice...just as my PS2 has been my sole DVD player for years now.

    --
    No Comment.
    1. Re:Of course not by cicatrix1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Bullshit. I know a ton of people (including myself) who didn't buy a stand-alone DVD player because the PS2 would have one. I'm *SURE* it's responsible for a growth of DVD sales. Your observation about DVD player sales hurting is probably spot on, however, even if you were comparing apples to oranges as the GP never mentioned players but was talking about actual DVDs.

      --

      I know more than you drink.
    2. Re:Of course not by chromatic · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I know a ton of people (including myself) who didn't buy a stand-alone DVD player because the PS2 would have one. I'm *SURE* it's responsible for a growth of DVD sales.

      I'm not certain that being *SURE* is a good substitute for actual statistics.

    3. Re:Of course not by ssewell · · Score: 2, Informative

      If blockbuster all of a sudden is half full of Blu-Ray disks, people will become very aware of the PS3's capabilities, just as they did with the PS2. Well... Blockbuster is about do just that.
    4. Re:Of course not by heinousjay · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is the games section. Every assertion is backed with a personal guarantee, which is backed with all manner of anecdotes. If you want fancy numbers that hold up to scrutiny, get yourself over to the science section.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
    5. Re:Of course not by alxbtk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'd say DVD drove PS2 sales, not the other way. DVD already was the de facto standard, I know lots of young couples who at the time settled in a new home and bought a PS2 to use it as both a console and a DVD player. This time, they try to push BluRay with PS3 sales, relying on the idea that PlayStation was the "standard" for gaming. But nothing's for granted in this market, remember Sega history.

    6. Re:Of course not by yaphadam097 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      My local Fry's had a gigantic sign over the blu-ray section the other day that said, "Blu-Ray discs require a Blu-Ray player." If there is enough confusion to justify that sign (Which just appeared there despite the fact that the Blu-Ray section has been there since late last year) then it is not surprising that many PS3 owners might be confused as well.

    7. Re:Of course not by realthing02 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So yuo demand proof, he gets some, and now you will ignore his opinion? I'm not sure why you even asked for proof in th first place.

      I'll agree it's not "common fucking sense" but he is not alone in this idea. I am well aware of the impact PS2 had on the DVD market, and you can see by Sony's strategy with the blu-ray player that they are too. It will jsut be time before we see if the strategy works again.

      Lastly, how does it read more like a press release? I mean, it's like you are struggling to argue at this point. i guess we can ignore your opinions, too.

    8. Re:Of course not by aichpvee · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There was an 83% increase in DVD sales the holiday season that PS2 was released. That's your statistic. How do you know it's an "actual" statistic? Why because I just made it up and told you so.

      Anecdotally, I have to agree with the GP. I worked electronics at a Target when PS2 was released and there were tons of people who were buying it primarily as a DVD player that maybe they'd play games on later because there wasn't much to play at launch. I'd say it's very likely that PS2 quickened the adoption rate of DVD, but I haven't seen any hard evidence supporting or refuting that assumption, so who knows.

      --
      The Farewell Tour II
    9. Re:Of course not by MikeBabcock · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When I go to Blockbuster and rent Blu-Ray movies they stop me at the desk and confirm that I have a Blu-Ray disc player every time (please add it to my customer profile). The one person I told I had a PS3 then replied "but you need a Blu-Ray disc player" which precipitated my explaining that the PS3 in fact included one.

      I'm not surprised by the findings at all from my experience. Sony needs a better marketing campaign, not a new price tag (although I'm all for cheaper).

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
  3. Don't know, or don't care? by AKAImBatman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    One of the interesting quirks of the market is that if you position a device as a game machine, people will buy it as a game machine. Thing like the media it takes are secondary to the function the device is being sold for. So if you sell your machine as a game machine, expect that people will treat it as such and compare it to other game machines. Secondary features like the BluRay drive will only matter if the device compares favorably on its primary function.

    Now if you position a device like the PS3 as a Sony's PlayStation Media Center, suddenly it looks like a good deal. It can play BluRay, PS1 games, PS2 games, and games "designed for the BluRay format". All for less than competing BluRay players.

    It's too bad that Sony didn't do this. They might have had a better response if they had.

    1. Re:Don't know, or don't care? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't care. I bought a Wii so that my wife and I could have a fun console that we could both enjoy. It's on the el-cheapo 19" TV in our bedroom, so HD is completely useless to me. We already have a DVD player. I specifically do not want BluRay. Nintendo's concentrating on quick, fun games instead of hard-core appeal (although Resident Evil 4 is incredibly great).

      Despite all those reasons, Ars must be right: we bought a Wii because we just didn't know what the 360 or PS3 could do. Yeah, that's it.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    2. Re:Don't know, or don't care? by *weasel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's too bad that Sony didn't do this. They might have had a better response if they had.

      I don't know how much more they could've said it. Every time their PR people open their mouths it's "Blu-ray" this and "computer in your living room" that.

      Trick is, it's a Playstation. Playstation is now synonymous with 'games' they way Nintendo is. You could print in big block letters "THIS THING DOES NOT PLAY GAMES" and people would still buy the PS3 to play games and nothing more.

      It goes back to the 'don't care' portion of your rhetorical. They simply don't care. Regardless of how you position these boxes, gamers just want to play games.

      Similarly: Nintendo isn't winning because they stayed away from HD and next-gen disc formats. They stayed away last-gen and that didn't help them any. The Wii is selling like gangbusters because it provides a social game experience that's unmatched anywhere else. Nintendo focused on what gamers were focused on: the fun. If the Wii did HD video it'd still be selling like gangbusters: and their HD cables would be just as under-utilized as those of the 360 and PS3.
      --
      // "Can't clowns and pirates just -try- to get along?"
    3. Re:Don't know, or don't care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Optimum word being "quick"

    4. Re:Don't know, or don't care? by cowscows · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't know. If they had called this thing something else, would more people really have bought it for bluray? Anyone who's interested in Bluray can easily do a minimal amount of research and discover that the PS3 plays them, and is one of the cheapest players out there. And in addition to a bluray player, you get this game console that does a bunch of other stuff. If I was in the market for a Bluray player, I'd have probably purchased a PS3 already. People aren't getting scared away from this bluray player because it's called a playstation, they're not buying it as a bluray player because they don't care about bluray.

      The mass market doesn't seem to want the media center that Sony has set out to create. There are a bunch of people out there that want a playstation to play games on. They're not sure that they want to pay $500+ for it though. Bluray hasn't been hurt by being bundled in the PS3 (although it hasn't been helped nearly as much as sony hoped so far), but the Playstation name has suffered because of it. Playstation used to mean a game console with bazillions of games, many of which were excellent. Now it still means that to some degree (PS2's are still moving off the shelves pretty heavily), but it also means a $600 video game console.

      Bluray doesn't even enter into the equation for most of the potential customers, except in the form of a couple hundred bucks added onto the price. When I bought my PS2, it was $250 which seemed normal for a game console to me. It also included a DVD player(the first I ever had), which was completely a bonus to me, because in my eyes it wasn't causing me to pay more for a video game console than I expected.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    5. Re:Don't know, or don't care? by Gravatron · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The playstations never had a lot of games early on, they always hit around year one. I remember it being a huge crisis for the ps2 back in the day. Xbox and GCN had hype behind them, and the DC had quite a few killer games, and Sony really had nothing stellar for its first year.


      Now, that all changed that fall though, when DMC, MGS, etc hit home. Sony's got a simular fall lineup this year, dropin something like 15-20 games I can see myself buying, most of which are exclusive.


      As for the price? I can point you to a few thousand posts during the early ps2 years on the official playstation boards with people complaining about how DVD drive up the cost and how games didn't need that much storage. It took a long time for those folks to shut up about it. Did Blu-ray hurt Sony? Yeah, but considering what all Sony used tech wise, it was going to be expensive ether way. XDR, Cell, Blu-ray, etc, all couldn't have been cheep.


      Despite being the worlds biggest ps1 and ps2 fan, $600 was just too much. When it droped to $500, I picked one up though. The 1.8 and 1.9 updates added all kinds of functionality, and now it's one well rounded and expandable system. Its a dozen devices in one package, and they keep adding stuff I don't even know how to use, such as all the audio options and such. What gets me is sony doesn't seem keen to advertise all that. You could devote a full page add to just listing features of the thing. This I think had been their greatest mistake.

    6. Re:Don't know, or don't care? by AdamThor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Now if you position a device like the PS3 as a Sony's PlayStation Media Center, suddenly it looks like a good deal. It can play BluRay, PS1 games, PS2 games, and games "designed for the BluRay format". All for less than competing BluRay players.

      It's too bad that Sony didn't do this. They might have had a better response if they had.


      Man, companies have been trying to come up with ways to sell people additional computer setups since the slowdown in 2000. Mostly they've been trying to do it with talk about "digital convergence" and the computer for their A/V setup. And it seems like a reasonable idea since the advent of the big flatscreen TV has pretty much doubled the price of a television in the "pretty nice" catagory (at least that's the way it seems to me).

      But people just don't give a crap about digital convergence. Computers are computers, and television is television, and consoles are consoles. Companies everywhere are trying to cross these lines and penetrate new markets, but it's a product that nobody wants. One of two things will make this actually come true:

      1) Someone will make the killer computer/tv/console cross-genre app
      2) Hardware gets cheap enough that the digital convergence device and the cheap VCR/DVD/whatever device cost approx the same (~$100 or less).

      I don't know if 1 is even possible, and every time hardware prices drop for 2 the computer vendors move to a more expensive hardware platform to keep margins up.

      Kutaragi: "PS3 is not a games machine"
      the press, the consumers, parents, PTA, RIAA, LAPD, the world, etc.: "Whatever, stupid."

      EXECUTIVE SUMMARY: NOBODY WANTS DIGITAL CONVERGENCE, EXCEPTING THE PEOPLE WHO SELL IT.

      --
      -- "Oh. This guy again."
  4. Too much. by Pojut · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While I LOVE all the things I can do with my 360 and my PS3 in terms of extra stuff beyond gaming, gaming is why I bought a GAMING CONSOLE. Yes, I do use them for things other than gaming, but honestly I would be very very happy if Microsoft and Sony had spent more money and R&D time in making their systems better gamingconsoles, and less of a multi-use piece of hardware.

    It raises the functionality of the consoles, but I would much rather be paying less for less functionality. The less I shell out for the console, the more I can spend on the games...which is exactly why I want a gaming console in the first place.

  5. HD Capability by lonechicken · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Of the three current "next gen" consoles, it's kind of ironic that the most popular one with the party gamers is the one that *doesn't* do HD. Considering that the Wii's the one most geared towards groups of people standing in front of a large TV screen.

  6. Justification of the expense by another_fanboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    one thing interests the majority of consumers: games

    Of course games are the primary reason people buy gaming system.

    not only are people not using these functions, they're not even aware of them.
    the higher cost of entry may be helping the PlayStation 3 in this respect.

    Considering many games are cross platform, the PS2 is still on the market with new titles, and the PS3 is the most expensive system available, there is little justification to buying one at the moment.

    the higher cost of entry may be helping the PlayStation 3 in this respect.

    Since when does higher cost mean higher quality, regardless of what it can do?

  7. Whaa?! by morari · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How do they justify the price to themselves then? I mean, at least you have mediocre Blu-Ray movies to watch while the console stagnates and remains without games to play. Oh, I forgot, it's all marketing. People are sheep and like commercials. Sony doesn't even need current commercials, because all of the Playstation and Playstation 2 commercials already have it so ingrained in peoples' minds. They see a brand and feel the need to purchase it regardless of any factors.

    --
    "He who can destroy a thing, controls a thing." --Paul Atreides, Dune
  8. Way to cherry pick quotes... by the_skywise · · Score: 2, Interesting

    How about even fewer gamers knew their 360 had HD graphics?
    "50 percent of gamers in the study knew the system [PS3] featured high-definition graphics, compared to the 30 percent of gamers who knew about the high-definition function of the 360."

    What does this also say about Blu-Ray only being successful because of the PS3? Only 40% of the PS3 owners account for all the Blu-Ray discs sold? What happens when the other 60% figure it out?

  9. I know that the ps3 plays blue-ray... by MarcoAtWork · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...however I sure would like to have more information about things like:

    - can the controller be used wirelessly to control the playing?
    - does the ps3 have an IR receiver so I can program my existing remote to control it like a stand-alone blue-ray player?
    - does the ps3 support blue-ray profile 1.1 (with dual decoding)?
    - how is the quality compared to a stand-alone player?
    - does the ps3 have a digital out to feed to my receiver? (coax? optical?)

    these are questions that right now have prevented me from purchasing one in favour of waiting for a combo blueray/hddvd player (if not I'd just get a ps3+x360 since they'd cost me the same in total and I'd have two consoles to boot). I have also found things like the following by perusing sites, things that should be made clear somewhere on sony's site

    - the ps3 does play dvd movies
    - the ps3 does NOT upscale dvd movies to 1080i/p
    - the ps3 supports 1080p/24 starting from firmware 1.9

    I think sony is trying hard to not position the ps3 as a blueray player with gaming capabilities, and holding back information like this is part of the game.

    --
    -- the cake is a lie
    1. Re:I know that the ps3 plays blue-ray... by thebluick · · Score: 2, Informative

      - can the controller be used wirelessly to control the playing? +YES - does the ps3 have an IR receiver so I can program my existing remote to control it like a stand-alone blue-ray player? +NO-its bluetooth - how is the quality compared to a stand-alone player? +As good or better with constant firmware updates improving quality - does the ps3 have a digital out to feed to my receiver? (coax? optical?) +yes - the ps3 does NOT upscale dvd movies to 1080i/p +actually it does upconvert to 1080p it was in a firmware update a couple months ago (it also upconverts ps2 and ps1 games) - the ps3 supports 1080p/24 starting from firmware 1.9 +its always supported this, now it just forces it for sets that it was having problems with.

    2. Re:I know that the ps3 plays blue-ray... by benzapp · · Score: 5, Informative

      - can the controller be used wirelessly to control the playing?

      Yes

      - does the ps3 have an IR receiver so I can program my existing remote to control it like a stand-alone blue-ray player?

      No

      - does the ps3 support blue-ray profile 1.1 (with dual decoding)?

      This standard isn't required for months. It's trivial to include support in a future firmware release.

      - how is the quality compared to a stand-alone player?

      You know about a future standard but haven't read any reviews of the PS3, the most popular bluray player? The quality is superb, and is considered to have better quality than many standalone players.

      - does the ps3 have a digital out to feed to my receiver? (coax? optical?)

      Sheesh, reading the box would answer this question. Of course it has optical output. That is the only way to receive surround sound with a bluray player.

      - the ps3 does NOT upscale dvd movies to 1080i/p

      This is false. Support for upscaling DVDs, PS1 and PS2 games was added in the 1.8 system software release in May. The quality of the upscaling is superior to my Yamaha DVD player that came with my 5.1 setup.

      - the ps3 supports 1080p/24 starting from firmware 1.9

      The ps3 has always supported 1080p output. The 1.9 release was relatively minor, with the only major component being support for Chinese text.

      --
      I don't read or respond to AC posts
    3. Re:I know that the ps3 plays blue-ray... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh, that shit key. Always eluding people.

  10. Still think price dominates the explanation by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If we assume that these figures apply to the population at large as Ars did when they speculated that this explains the Wii's dominance, then this means that 40% of the population is aware of PS3's BluRay capabilities. Yet they're not choosing to buy a PS3.

    Because knowing the PS3 has BluRay doesn't cause an extra $350 to spontaneously appear in your wallet.

    "Good value for what you get if you can/will use all of its features" does not translate into "I can afford to spend that much on a toy".

    It's not complicated.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
  11. Re:Wii-tards by BarneyL · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Correction: Most people who buy a Wii don't care what the differences in the hardware specs are between the systems. They only look at the gameplay.

  12. See? by MBCook · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've been saying this all along. With many stories here on /. people say "But no one will care about the Wii because it can't do HD" and this kind of thing was my answer to that (although I'm surprised the numbers for HD game playing are THAT LOW). I submitted this myself yesterday (although this write-up looks better and sources Ars). I have a Wii plugged into my HDTV and love it. I don't have a 360 yet (thinking of getting one) and the PS3 doesn't have any games I care about yet (except for MGS4, but that won't be out for a while).

    This shouldn't be surprising. The TV ads for the 360 and PS3 don't mention HD, and Joe Bob buys an HDTV and watches over-the-air analog stations and thinks that's HD.

    Mostly, I'd say this is a failure of marketing. That said, it's a good shot against the "no one wants non-HD stuff" argument.

    --
    Comment forecast: Bits of genius surrounded by a sea of mediocrity.
  13. How about this instead? by RichPowers · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Microsoft and Sony don't know their customers.

  14. Nintendo Wins for Another Reason by MolarMass · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I just found out a few days ago that my grandmother, who is in her 70s, used a Nintendo Wii at my brother's house. She is a golfer, and she played Wii Golf for her first time, and she proceeded to play extremely well, and easily beat my brother.

    So, Wii is full of win because my non-gaming grandmother can play, and succeed, at a video game without a bunch of hassle.

    It wouldn't matter to her if it could play movies or dispense kittens, and I'd imagine those things don't matter much to others, either. Though, kittens would be cute.

    1. Re:Nintendo Wins for Another Reason by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Pretty much the exact same reason my parents bought one.
      My parents are not gamers. The last console they bought was an NES for my brother's birthday one year. The last system that one of them actually picked up a controller for was the Atari 2600 (not counting the hours my father spent with me playing PC flight sims). My brother brought over his Wii during Christmas and we all proceeded to play Wii golf until the wee hours of the morning, several days in a row. After that, my parents ended up buying a new TV, and talked the Circuit City salesman into holding a Wii for them as well. Much to my chagrin, this enabled them to get one well before I could find one. They now play with it semi-regularly, mostly Wii-Sports bowling, golf, and Tiger Woods golf.
      Nintendo isn't winning because of a lack of HD, they are winning because the Wii is a lot of fun and very accessible to non-gamers and I am sure that the price helps $300 for the system, a game and extra controller is cheap. People who would never even think about an XBox or PS3 are buying Wii's in droves. Hell, it's still hard to get one.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
  15. Big news flash. by LWATCDR · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Most iPod owners don't know that you can play games on their iPod.
    Most iPod owners don't know that you can load Linux on their iPod.

    The the primary function of a device is the the most important function for the people that buy that device.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    1. Re:Big news flash. by mehemiah · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most iPod owners don't know that you can load Linux on their iPod.
      Linux isn't a primary function of the iPod. Apple didn't add 100 dollars to the price tag of my ipod so i could put Linux on it.
    2. Re:Big news flash. by Kenshin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most iPod owners don't know that you can load Linux on their iPod.

      Honestly, most PC owners don't know you can load Linux on their PC.

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

  16. Re:The Wii is not foolproof either. by cez · · Score: 2, Funny

    hmmm.... try telling them BEFORE you pack the bong.

    --
    Walk with Music;
  17. What do you mean apparent? by oddman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Does anyone doubt that Nintendo is currently winning this generation console war? Saying that Nintendo is apparently dominant is like saying that the US is apparently occupying Iraq.

  18. Re:Wii-tards by RamblinLonghorn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Correction: Most people who buy a Wii are seeing overwhelming positive press coupled with an effective advertising campaign. Adding to this is the fact the Wii has proven most successful at engaging people in local multiplayer gaming, which improves word of mouth advertising.

  19. Re:Wii-tards by anotherone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Correction: people buy the Wii because it's fun, pure and simple.

    --
    Username taken, please choose another one.
  20. Re:The Wii is not foolproof either. by Zantetsuken · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not necessarily - people will be sold on "Super Crazy Ninja Vista Ultimate Media Center Laptop" sales at Best Buy due to the "uber-enhanced media capabilities", and then when they go on a long flight and want to watch movies, how many of these people do you think will take the laptop but forget they can play movies on it and go spend an extra $300 to 400 USD on a standalone portable DVD-player device?

    It's not just a case of pot-head room-mates, less technically apt-people seem to associate certain functions with devices advertised to to just that and go purchase it when they already have a much more powerful/useful device already (Vista or not, just about any laptop is going to be more useful than a standalone DVD player)

  21. Re:Well Gosh Darn It All... by mr_mischief · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A handful of early adopters is not a sizable market. You're just subsidizing manufacturing line refreshes and ramp-up that will give the rest of us the same stuff for half as much in two years or so. Thanks for that, BTW.

  22. The PS3 plays games?!? by ibullard · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I didn't know my Blue-ray player was also a game machine!!!

  23. I know someone... by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know someone who bought a PS3 without realizing it had...

    well...

    anything other than hype.

    I'm not kidding. I swear to God, this kid brought the PS3 home, plugged it in, hooked it up to his standard-definition TV, and used it to play a PS2 version of Tomb Raider. At least, I think it was PS2 -- it might have been PS1. He was crowing about his "next-generation game console" experience, but hell, he wasn't even using the "internal memory card" (store PS2 savegames on the hard drive) because he didn't know how, and thought he'd have to buy something. The only conceivable improvement in his experience was the wireless controller, but with such a short cord (for when the battery dies) and no rumble, the advantages are kind of dubious.

    This is someone who already had a PS2.

    Every now and then, his brother rents a PS3 game and brings it home, but he mostly uses it to play PS2 games.

    Now, the one thing I will say in his favor is that he is actually retarded. He actually does have a real, physical, chemical imbalance in his brain. So in a way, I kind of can't blame him for being such an absurd Sony fanboy...

    But looking at him kind, I kind of have to wonder, what do the whole, sane, and intelligent people who bought a PS3 have to say for themselves? Especially if they didn't realize it had blu-ray?

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    1. Re:I know someone... by LKM · · Score: 4, Funny

      I bought mine because it looks kinda like the monolith from 2001. Same size, too. It's a real conversation starter. True story.

    2. Re:I know someone... by HalAtWork · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I bought one 'cause way back they were saying the PS3 was going to have the next Katamari Damacy game, and the Wii one was cancelled. I had no choice but to get one! Yes, Katamari was going to be on 360, but I already didn't want one of those. Plus, on 360, they were saying it would be a download through Live! arcade, and I know I wanted to own a hard copy of the game. The PS3 also had Virtua Fighter 5 as an exclusive (at the time there was no sign it would come out on any other console) so I had to buy that. I'm a big VF fan. The Wipeout series is also tied to the PlayStation platform, and I'm a big fan of that. I also thought that even if the PS3 wouldn't have a ton of exclusives, it would get all of the niche games the way the PS2 did, because I assumed it would sell better than the 360. All in all, I think the PS3 complements my Wii well for all of the games that won't really be appearing on the Wii, and for the fact that I can play Blu-ray movies. Really does look night/day compared to DVDs, if only just for the increase in the preserved colour range of the original video. Even upscaled DVD looks like VHS in comparison, because of colours alone. Watching a DVD looks like playing Quake 2.... everything looks like mud.

    3. Re:I know someone... by in5ane · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Oh OK, you're one of those guys who win arguments by quoting ad nauseam. And your basically telling me I'm wrong and you're right, on the basis that you don't agree with me :)

      The only thing that riled me was using a retarded kid as an example, and then saying, "it's ok he's stupid". That's like me telling you some story about a guy falling down, and then closing with "Oh it's ok, he was disabled anyway". If you can't see why this is insensitive, then there is something wrong in *your* brain. (And he's meant to be your friend as well!)

  24. Re:Wii-tards by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Funny

    Correction: people buy the Wii because its peppy!

    --
    liqbase :: faster than paper
  25. Re:Wii-tards by 7Prime · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Because the N64 was a big letdown, and people didn't want to be burned again.

    Seriously, a large part of a console's success is owed to how well the previous generation was recieved. In actuality, the GameCube was recieved VERY WELL, even if it didn't sell very well. It cleared up about 90% of the mistakes that Nintendo had made with the N64 (which lost them control), but it was going to take another generation for sales to really reflect that. Hence the popularity of the Wii.

    --
    Multiplayer Gaming (defined): Sitting around, discussing single-player games with my friends, at the bar.
  26. Honestly... by Cyno01 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Mario Party 8 and Rayman look pretty damn good on my 30" 1080i CRT, this however has everything to do with the "art" and not the "graphics". Not to mention after everyones had a few drinks they could be sprites and it would still be just as fun. Super Paper Mario looks gorgeous, especially at 480p, and its all thanks to the artwork. Really though, i'm playing a GAME, if i want realism i'll go outside. Do we really want all games to be photo-realistic? Resident Evil 4 for the wii looks pretty damn good, expecially since the cut-scenes and things are rendered so they can be displayed in the native 480p, it may not be Resistance on the PS3 with HDMI, but if i'm killing zombies for a couple of hours, do i want it to be that realistic? I'd probably be sick.

    --
    "Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
  27. Re:The Wii's success is due to price. Period. by grumbel · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think the main point of the Wii is neither price nor the control scheme alone, but simply its simplicity. In 30sec a consumer can understand what the Wii will do for him and how it will be fun, both of these are very successfully told trough advertisement, word of mouth and Wii Sports as the perfect demo game. With PS3 and XBox360 you really can't make a normal person understand so easily what is good about them, especially not in 30sec.

  28. Well, duh! by seebs · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't buy a gaming console to be all sorts of other crap; I buy it to play games.

    Nintendo's success comes from their decision to sell a good toy at a reasonable (albeit sorta high) price for a toy, while their competition is trying to sell a toy at a ludicrously high price, claiming that it's a really good deal for the incredible general-purpose computer and movie machine that it really is... But since the market is the toy market, that's sorta running into issues.

    Maybe they shoulda called it the MovieStation.

    --
    My blog: http://www.seebs.net/log/ --- My iPhone/iPad app: http://www.seebs.net/seebsfrac/
  29. Re:Wii-tards by 7Prime · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Hows this: "I'd rather play this game than Motorstorm, Need For Speed Carbon, GranTourismo, or any other racing game that the PS3 has to offer." Now, granted, I'm not a fan of racing games, and that's sort of the point, Excite Truck *IS* more of an arcade game. Is it the kind of game I'd buy a $600 console for? Absolutely not. But neither is Motorstorm. At least Excite Truck has the Wiimote control scheme (which is REALLY FUN, I might add).

    --
    Multiplayer Gaming (defined): Sitting around, discussing single-player games with my friends, at the bar.
  30. Re:Wii-tards by LKM · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What? People buy Wiis because it reminds them of the Arcades? That's the most absurd theory I've ever heard.

    And Excite Truck was a good game. Owning both the Wii and the PS3, I put about three times as much time into Excite Truck than Motorstorm.

  31. Re:Wii-tards by LKM · · Score: 2, Interesting
    1. Ironically, the Wii Sports game have more depth than most other sports games I've ever played. What other boxing game has such precise controls and so many different moves? What other Tennis game lets you slice the ball so precisely?
    2. The Wii has more First Person Shooters than Minigames compilations.
    3. Dude, if you consider yourself a hardcore gamer, but think that Warioware has "poor gameplay" (with gameplay in quotes, I might add), you're unfortunately a sad little fanboy.
  32. Ok by soilheart · · Score: 2, Insightful

    With the risk to be modded flamebait and/or troll I'd say that the survey was in USA only.

    Mostly because here in Europe and especially here in Sweden they are really expensive.
    With a price of $860 (cheapest price) they have to make the potential buyers aware of EVERY function... if not, I don't think people really would buy one.