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PSP Go With 16GB Memory and Bluetooth Leaked

Lyonhrt writes "Engadget and Gizmodo have spilled the beans on the news of the new UMD-less PSP Go that comes with 16GB of memory and a slide screen; also among the features will be built-in Bluetooth and an undisclosed memory slot. The console will be sold alongside the PSP-3000, but there are no details on price at this time. This is obviously Sony's answer to the lost battle with the PSP Homebrew and Hacking Communities, which have cost many thousands of lost sales with custom firmwares."

7 of 190 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Who cares? by Dwedit · · Score: 5, Informative

    The directional controls on mobile phones are crap compared to a Gameboy. Only touchscreen-based or simple puzzle games work well on a phone.

  2. Re:How does custom firmware "lose sales" by TheKidWho · · Score: 4, Informative

    Because almost everyone who runs with customfirmware just downloads the game files via torrent?

    Most consoles are sold at a loss and makeup this loss through licensing fees for games.

  3. Re:How does custom firmware "lose sales" by Darkness404 · · Score: 4, Informative

    It loses sales because the majority of people running custom firmware do so to play pirated games. Same goes for the R4 device on the DS.

    [Citation Needed]

    Sure, custom firmware can be used to play pirated PSP games much as how a candle can be used to burn down a house, yet that isn't necessarily mean thats the reason for having a candle burning in a house. There are many applications such as Nintendo emulators, etc. that will never be released on the PSP with an official release yet you can get them via custom firmware.

    Same thing with the DS, as someone who owns a flash cart (purchased oddly enough at Wal-Mart) there are many, many, many quality applications that are DS homebrew. Some things such as emulators will never be released for it legitimately and there are also many homebrew games that will never be officially released for it.

    In most homebrew circles piracy is frowned heavily upon.

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    Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
  4. Re:How does custom firmware "lose sales" by V50 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because despite the people who get up in arms over how Sony is attempting to crush the poor, innocent "homebrew" community, every single person I know IRL who has run custom firmware has used it to pirate games, and maybe an emulator.

    And these are very much lost sales, I've seen people go from regularly buying PSP/DS games to not buying any at all once they discovered they could pirate them. :-/

  5. Re:I wonder how existing PSP owners will react by spire3661 · · Score: 3, Informative

    You buy a PSP 3000 then. It says right in the article that they will still sell PSP-3000s side by side with the PSP GO. This is a smart stop gap move by Sony. A UMD docking station is almost absolutely out of the question. Besides, IF they were to do that, they would force you to use a PS3 connected to your PSP.

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    Good-bye
  6. Re:How does custom firmware "lose sales" by Your.Master · · Score: 3, Informative

    No.

    There's economics of scale in here. Selling it in all territories for the price they do in poor territories is not profitable. However, selling it in poor territories for the price they sell it in rich territories is pointless because they will make 0 sales.

    They can sell these things for barely above the DVD pressing and distribution costs, but they also need to recover the upfront costs of making the movie.

  7. Re:How does custom firmware "lose sales" by Spatial · · Score: 3, Informative

    But the PSP doesn't have regional lockout. You can already play imported games on any PSP. I think there was maybe a few exceptions to that, but on the whole, nope.

    Granted there are plenty of other reasons to want homebrew. I wouldn't have bought a PSP if it couldn't do it.