Sony Reportedly Ends PSP Go Production
Sony's PSP Go launched in late 2009 to mixed reviews and tepid sales. A little over a year later, Sony announced the portable console's successor, the NGP, leading to speculation about how long the PSP Go would last. Now, a report out of Japan suggests production on the device is winding down. Sony responded to inquiries about the report with vague PR-speak, but a UK retailer confirmed that they wouldn't be receiving replacements once their current stock ran out.
Good riddance. I could never see the rationale behind the PSP Go; why pay extra for a version of a handheld console that actually offered less functionality than the original? The online Playstation Store still has issues with the range of titles available (though this is improving), pricing structures (likewise improving, but only slowly) and user interface (where it is a long way behind Xbox Live and the App Store).
The weird thing is, however, that despite facing ridicule in its early years, the base PSP has gone on to be a curious kind of success story. With almost 70 million units sold worldwide and some impressive games sales figures, it's basically the first non-Nintendo handheld to achieve any real degree of success (even if it does lag a long way behind the DS). For comparison, Sega's Game Gear managed around 11 million units and the Atari Lynx a paltry 5 million - and the poor old Nokia N-Gage apparently only managed to attract around 3-4 million side-talkers. Weirdly, the PSP is now acting as the main competition to the 3DS, which it is now outselling on a week by week basis in some markets (with the PSP's lower price tag undoubtedly helping). It certainly helps - particularly in Japan - that the PSP has become the successor to the PS2 as the title that picks up the quirky and interesting low-budget games, particularly RPGs.
The irony is that having seen the PSP turn into a late-cycle success, Sony look set to kill it off with a successor at exactly the wrong moment. Latest sales figures indicate that had Sony left the PSP alone (while killing off the PSP Go like the irrelevance it is), it could have seriously hurt the 3DS's prospects in Japan - which is only one market, but nevertheless an important one. The 3DS is vulnerable right now - its launch games lineup is weak and its 3d effect is is impressive at first glance but everybody I know has turned it off after a day or two at most due either because they get headaches or because it's just plain distracting when trying to play games - it's still worth seeing, but you might as well just see it on a friend's console for half an hour rather than fork out for your own.
Keeping the games flowing onto the PSP for the next 18 months or so (capitalising on the weak 3DS lineup for the next 6 months) and keeping the spotlight within Japan on it could have denied the 3DS a convincing foothold and increased developer nervousness about jumping to a new platform. However, by putting out a new platform of their own so soon after the 3DS - and one which, judging by its specs, will likely cost even more than the 3DS (ouch), Sony are exposing themselves to exactly the same risks. A $350 NGP (number entirely hypothetical, but within the bounds of possibility given the spec) with another Lumines + Wipeout-style launch lineup (not to disparge Lumines, which was great) would really struggle in the present economic climate. It does make me wonder whether they learned anything at all from the harm that the high initial price of the PS3 did them. I wonder if it's their piracy-paranoia driving the switch - the PSP has been "unlocked" for a long time (as has the DS).
The PSP Go was a frakin' horrid piece of hardware that wasn't worth the plastic it's frame is made out of.
Honestly though, it was just a bad product that took out features from the original from attempts to close and kill out the home-brew (pirate?) community.
The hardware is beautiful but the marketing strategy was epic fail.
YOU CANNOT STORE GAMES.
It's download only, but you only get 16GB. And you could buy PSP games for the price of those super-mini not to mention empty memory cards.
They had a hard time selling them, because they had a hard time explaining why the normal PGP was better.
EPIC FAIL.
Subject says it all. The fact that one of my friends managed to break his Sony TV today just mounting it to the wall is proof enough that their hardware is cheap shit, not withstanding my 2 PS 2s that died within 100 days of release and the fact that they didn't stand behind them. Ever since I've stopped being a Sony fanboi sucking on SCEAs tit, my (electronic) life has improved immeasurably, Fuck Sony, I hope the company as a whole will quickly die a horrible, shitty death and I will watch the satisfaction of watching their stock price sink lower and lower until it hits 0 as they continuously fuck over their consumer base until nothing is left .
Oh btw, did I mention?
Fuck Sony.
Saw this coming the day I first set eyes on it. Slide-out design is awful. The NGP looks great - hopefully they will allow you to clone the ps3 video-out wirelessly to play games in close proximity to the console. My guess is this is what nintendo have up their sleeve for the wii2.
My 8 year old son got a PSP Go for Christmas from his aunt. I used my credit card to put $40.00 on it so he could buy some games. He bought for $100.00 because my credit card information was stored on it, and it couldn't be removed. There was some option to reset to factory settings or something like that, I didn't try that because I figured it would erase the $100.00 worth of games as well.
So I had to cancel my credit card to prevent anyone who got his hands on the PSP Go from buying stuff on it.
No more Sony for me.
I find a pleasing symmetry between your user-name and the sane, calm, utterly harmless tone of your post.
Keep up the good work!
One thing people forget is that, for a growing number of games, the PSP is also capable of 3D via setting the display to red-cyan anaglyph images.
Of course, this is a 3rd party feature that can only be used on hacked PSPs last I checked, but it's not like that's very hard.
My wife bought me a PSP Go for Xmas when they first came out.
I like it - nice and compact, doesn't need a stack of discs to work, nifty form factor, great screen, and a whole bunch of cool games.
I never understood the virulent hate for this system - I enjoy mine.
DG
Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
Subject says it all. T
Fuck Sony, they are a has been in the internet age (
What the fuck does your title says? in your race for the first post you only wrote a lot of nonsense. Can yo please calm down and rephrase your rambling so that we can understand it?
Sheesh, we should strive to leave this kind of nonsense to Digg, youtube or the like.
Thank you.
Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
Here:
>Fuck Sony, they are a has-been in the Internet age
I like one product by Sony, Sony Vegas Pro and it's side kick DVD Architect pro. I along with everyone else was mad about sony rootkit, but regardless I love vegas and I hope Sony recovers from this fukushima / nukequake shit.. Until you can provide a NLE / Audio editor equal to it, your opinion is simply uninformed, retarded and bullsht..
So you pay a little more for the compact form factor and the associated cost with miniaturization.
There is value to smaller. Maybe not enough value to justify the price premium and lack of physical media for you... but hey, that's a design tradeoff and not everybody has the same wants and needs.
The tradeoffs can certainly influence the decision to purchase one model over the other - but HATE? That's just silly.
DG
Want to learn about race cars? Read my Book
it was pretty clear from the get-go that retailers were going to get the short end of the stick with the PSP Go. They make money on software, not hardware, and the PSP Go doesn't need boxed software. They tried selling download keys in plastic cases, but there isn't a retailer alive dumb enough to fall for that. I remember the PSP Go kiosk at Best buy was just an empty PSP Go, no games :). The rumor was the only reason they had it was Sony threatened to stop shipping PS3s to them if they didn't. The retailers killed it dead.
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Sony's stock has been on a relative rise since 2009, going from 19-30ish.
The fact that your friend broke a tv mounting it to the wall means that your friend doesn't know how to wall mount a tv.
The original PS2 warranty was a full year, so you would have gotten a replacement. Of course, the PS2 didn't have internal storage, it used memory cards, so you didn't even lose anything if your system broke (except the 2-4 weeks while Sony attempted to fix your system before sending you a new/refurbished one). Today, a used PS2 will come with a 30 day return it if you don't like it clause and a 90 day warranty. Thats not bad for a $60 electronic device. You can even add a year long warranty from squaretrade for maybe $10.
You are a bitter, lying, pathetic person. Snap out of it before it causes you health problems.
They tried selling download keys in plastic cases, but there isn't a retailer alive dumb enough to fall for that.
*cough*MicrosoftWindowsAnytimeUpgrade
*cough*MicrosoftOffice
Sounds a lot like selling iPods to me. Person buys an iPod from the retailer, they buy iTunes cards from the retailer. Optionally they can just buy stuff straight from Apple with their credit card. The retailer basically only gets money from the initial sale of the iPod. But the retailers haven't killed the iPod yet. What made the PSP Go so different.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.