Ajax said:PS3 will be first by 2008 in USA. You can quote me on that.
Shiggy said:How many X360 are sold through at this point? Something between 3.6 and 3.9 million (worldwide)?
Juice said:Predictions are that about 5.5-6 have shipped, MS is planning to have 10 shipped WW by EOY.
I don't know hard numbers
artful_dodger said:Personally, I don't know any kids in the 8-15 crowd that are even remotely interested in the Wii (and I went out of my way to ask a younger cousin of mine and his friends.) Right now they are all about the 360 and PS3.
I suspect Sony will be in the lead everywhere but Japan by the time the dust settles after holiday 2007 (the Wii will be #1 in Japan.)
Kung Fu Jedi said:I personally, as in totally anecdotal here, don't know anyone outside of this forum who is interested or excited about the Wii.
Razoric said:same
Amir0x said:everyone will be totally interested when they see the kiosks! everyone in america! Nay, the world
Odysseus said:The universe, judging by your ten trillion figure!
jetjevons said:Are you chatting with 6 to 16 year olds?
johnjohnson said:By 2011 X720 will get its second (or maybe third) generation games. Or do you really expect the X360 to have a longer life than the original Xbox?
jarrod said:Just a shot in the dark, by 2011...
North America
Xbox 360~ 30m
PlayStation 3 ~25m
Wii~ 20m
Worldwide
PlayStation 3~ 60m
Wii~ 45m
Xbox 360~ 40m
jarrod said:Just a shot in the dark, by 2011...
North America
Xbox 360~ 30m
PlayStation 3 ~25m
Wii~ 20m
Worldwide
PlayStation 3~ 60m
Wii~ 45m
Xbox 360~ 40m
Arsenal said:The 360 is better designed for cost reductions in the future so as long as MS is making a profit towards the end of their lifecycle, they will continue to support it for a longer period of time.
I think has a great shot at leading Japan (like 15-20mk lifetime), and I think we'll see at least modest gains in NA/EU probably. Novel interfaces + (comparably) bargin pricing + nostalgia cashing-in is going to drive this thing like crazy. No way is it only going to push GameCube numbers though, in any market.Arsenal said:I think this is a more likly senario with each console leading in a different region.
I am still skeptical of the Wii though. The DS will likely blow all of the above numbers out of the water and I'm not convinced that people will buy both the Wii and the DS.
1up.com said:According to findings analyst group The Yankee Group released today, Sony's going to win the next-generation console battle. It's not going to by a knockout this round, though, but more of a "by decision" victory, with the firm's findings predicting PlayStation 3 capturing 44% of the market with 30 million units, 40% to Xbox 360 at 27 million units, and Wii trailing behind with 16% of the market, 11 million units sold.
There's been plenty of great things said about the Wii in recent months, so why think Nintendo will end up in last again? "Casual gamers don't buy consoles," said Michael Goodman, Yankee Group Media and Entertainment Strategies Senior Analyst. "They're [Nintendo] looking at the same market they've always had. And they're not going to spend money to go out and get it."
While Goodman praises the Wii as a "phenomenal product," he states it's "too much work for the majority of the market" and Nintendo isn't doing enough to "change the market dynamics significantly." He does believes, however, that while Wii will gain only a small amount of ground in America, it can pick up marketshare in Japan thanks to Microsoft's fumblings with Xbox 360, and southern Europe, due to a price sensitive market.
Will the PS3's expensive pricepoint price the company out of the race with Microsoft? Goodman doesn't think so; Sony has a trump card: "Brand loyalty. You've got 100 million PlayStation loyalists. Microsoft will do well, but it's difficult to go from 22 million sold [Xbox] to 100 million sold. It's an auspicious goal," says Goodman.
Simultaneously, he doesn't expect Microsoft will take the situation laying down. "[Microsoft] learned things over the course of the of the past 4-5 years... putting Sony on the defensive. The bottom line, which I doubt they've admit to you, is they're being forced to react to Microsoft." He cites Grand Theft Auto as an example of this. "It's coming out on both platforms, but coming out a month earlier on the 360. That's going to be a big driver for it. That's going to drive a lot of unit sales. Publishers in particular -- their actions say they see this as an even marketplace. Sony is not getting the same treatment that they have previously received."
Who said anything about the next Grand Theft Auto appearing earlier on Xbox 360, though? Goodman has his facts messed up; as far as we've heard, it's only receiving exclusive online content via Xbox Live Marketplace, and who knows what will change between now and the game's release next fall.
Goodman also commented about de-facto next-generation exclusives, such as Madden NFL '07, and if that would help sell consoles. "Absolutely. Any time advantage on the 360 for multiplatform helps," he says.
Graphics tend to play heavily the consumer's decision (something Nintendo's obviously hoping to change with Wii), and Goodman sees this playing into Xbox 360's favor because many games "currently ... look better on the 360 because it's second-third gen software," and "it's more refined," whereas PS3 games will only be "first-gen graphics."
Another point of interest is a prediction that console sales will be down overall, mostly due to the higher price tags. "You'll find less multiple console homes for the first two years. You're not going to find people going out to buy a PS3 after a 360 if they both do almost the same thing," he says. Goodman compares scenario to the console wars of 1995, when Sony challenged Sega and Nintendo for control of the market. "This is the strongest challenge to Sony's dominance since then," he continues.
Even if you don't believe or agree with their findings, there's at least one thing to take away from this report: this next-gen console battle is going to be bloody.
He cites Grand Theft Auto as an example of this. "It's coming out on both platforms, but coming out a month earlier on the 360.
Confidence Man said:Really?
The GBA alone had massive success and appeal in the US, and had a near complete monopoly on the market, and it's only sold, what, 36m or so? You think the handheld market will increase almost two fold?jarrod said:North America
Nintendo DS~ 40m
PSP~ 20m
-Rogue5- said:I say that as soon as it drops to ~$400ish for the "pro" bundle, they'll skyrocket even more.
You got to give Sony a little credit... even at $600 they're bound to sell out until March... and at that price they'll have quite a big price to chip away from. Picture this; they sell all 6million units at $600, pricedrop in march to $550 to sell to those still on the fence, pricedrop next fall to $500 to reap the holiday reward, then price drop in spring 2k8 to $450, etc. etc.
They could essentially prolong sell-through by dropping the price $50 every 6months for almost the entire console life-cycle. It's a clever plan, and there are enough sony fanboys at each pricepoint that they could sellout continuously... A lot of people in GAF and the gaming community seem to write off this possibility.
You didn't come from IGN did you?Agent Dormer said:He does believes, however,
Well, since the amount of viable massmarket handhelds increased by two fold... sure.Beowvlf said:The GBA alone had massive success and appeal in the US, and had a near complete monopoly on the market, and it's only sold, what, 36m or so? You think the handheld market will increase almost two fold?
Speevy said:I'm sorry, but there's very little to suggest that the Wii will outsell the 360 in North America. Not even Nintendo's DS sales prior to the DS Lite. Not Nintendo's third party software support. Its price advantage will even be negated VERY quickly when the 360 drops for the first time.
Campster said:That's assuming the PS3 magically turns a profit. MS's game division is still hemorrhaging cash, and the PS3 certainly seems to be following the Microsoft mantra of "tons of power sold at a loss in order to gain market share so that some day we can actually turn a profit on these things."
1up.com said:According to findings analyst group The Yankee Group released today, Sony's going to win the next-generation console battle. It's not going to by a knockout this round, though, but more of a "by decision" victory, with the firm's findings predicting PlayStation 3 capturing 44% of the market with 30 million units, 40% to Xbox 360 at 27 million units, and Wii trailing behind with 16% of the market, 11 million units sold.
There's been plenty of great things said about the Wii in recent months, so why think Nintendo will end up in last again? "Casual gamers don't buy consoles," said Michael Goodman, Yankee Group Media and Entertainment Strategies Senior Analyst. "They're [Nintendo] looking at the same market they've always had. And they're not going to spend money to go out and get it."
PhatSaqs said:2011? I say holiday 2007.
irfan said:Even the best case scenario has Sony losing market share, how is it the best case scenario?![]()
xaosslug said:losing "marketshare" doesn't necessarily mean a decline in all around userbase.
xaosslug said:losing "marketshare" doesn't necessarily mean a decline in all around userbase.
I could say the same thing about the PS3.Kung Fu Jedi said:I personally, as in totally anecdotal here, don't know anyone outside of this forum who is interested or excited about the Wii.
Too bad PlayStation's positioned to drop in both.xaosslug said:losing "marketshare" doesn't necessarily mean a decline in all around userbase.
xaosslug said:losing "marketshare" doesn't necessarily mean a decline in all around userbase.