Man such spin. Delusion is a tributary of Denial.
How do you explain this then?
Man such spin. Delusion is a tributary of Denial.
Looking at these threads, people like to view their favourite company as a person doing good (or bad) things, but companies just do not work like that most of the time. Even when they present themselves as being personal, that is often part of the image they aim for in their business strategy.
I have a realy hard time believing Nintendo and Sony did not have a business plan thought out before the product reached a state worthy of presentation to the market. Thus, I do not believe it is as simple as Sony suddenly demanding that cut out of the blue. If they truly had not decided on cuts and legalities surrounding their ip's in an early stage, then that seems quite amateurish to me. How the money will be divided and who owns what is not something you skip when making plans with another company, seriously.
So a question to you history-GAF, was there any event or similar product on the market to possibly make one of the companies reconsider their plans around that time? I know there were already disc-based consoles around then, maybe the bad market position and major technical caveats of those had an impact? Or maybe changes in costs of certain production processes had an influence?
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How do you explain this then?
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How do you explain this then?
PlayStation was the brainchild of Ken Kutaragi, a Sony executive who had just come out of his hardware engineering division at that time and would later be dubbed as "The Father of the PlayStation".[15][16]
The console's origins date back to 1988 where it was originally a joint project between Nintendo and Sony to create a CD-ROM for the Super Famicom.[17] Although Nintendo denied the existence of the Sony deal as late as March 1991,[18] Sony revealed a Super Famicom with a built-in CD-ROM drive (that incorporated Green Book technology or CDi) at the Consumer Electronics Show in June 1991. However, a day after the announcement at CES Nintendo announced that it would be breaking its partnership with Sony, opting to go with Philips instead but using the same technology.[19] The deal was broken by Nintendo after they were unable to come to an agreement on how revenue would be split between the two companies.[19] The breaking of the partnership infuriated Sony President Norio Ohga, who responded by appointing Kutaragi with the responsibility of developing of the PlayStation project to rival Nintendo.[19]
At that time, negotiations were still on-going between Nintendo and Sony, with Nintendo offering Sony a "non-gaming role" regarding their new partnership with Philips. This proposal was swiftly rejected by Kutaragi who was facing increasing criticism over his work with regard to entering the video game industry from within Sony. Negotiations officially ended in May 1992 and in order to decide the fate of the PlayStation project, a meeting was held in June 1992, consisting of Sony President Ohga, PlayStation Head Kutaragi and several senior members of Sony's board. At the meeting, Kutaragi unveiled a proprietary CD-ROM-based system he had been working on which involved playing video games with 3D graphics to the board. Eventually, Sony President Ohga decided to retain the project after being reminded by Kutaragi of the humiliation he suffered from Nintendo. Nevertheless, due to strong opposition from a majority present at the meeting as well as widespread internal opposition to the project by the older generation of Sony executives, Kutaragi and his team had to be shifted from Sony's headquarters to Sony Music, a completely separate financial entity owned by Sony, so as to retain the project and maintain relationships with Philips for the MMCD development project (which helped lead to the creation of the DVD).[19]
whynotboth.gifSony fanboys think Nintendo backstabbed
Nintendo fanboys think Sony wanted majority control of their crap
who do I believe?
I know. I was just testing you guys
props to the three people here that referenced both instead of one side
There's a book; Console Wars (being made into a movie!) that talks about what happened. Read that. Most of this thread are fanboys trying to spin things.
The main takeaway is that Nintendo more or less ended up creating their two biggest rivals. Had that deal not gone as south as bad as it did (fault be damned), Sony would not have created the Playstation (it was legitimately authorized because the head of Sony was that mad at Nintendo). which then led to Microsoft entering the console wars because they were afraid of the PS2 becoming the hub for the living room (and not the PC, like they had hoped for). It's a little crazy how one decision had such an insane ripple effect.
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How do you explain this then?
Could you imagine if that deal went through? What-If scenarios like this amaze me to no end. I figure Microsoft would still have entered the console market eventually if it happened, too.
According to this article, Sega of America wanted to work with sony, having little faith in the Saturn.Not watched the video due to the length and doing work but I always thought it was this:
Ken Kutaragi secretly approached Nintendo to create the audio chip for the SNES. Philips and Sony created a new CD format, Nintendo liked it and set up a deal with Sony to create the SNES-CD as well as a Sony brand console using the same tech due to their relationship with Ken. For some reason Nintendo didn't read the contract until Sony had announced the Play Station at CES, essentially Sony had total control of the CD format and the content, understandably Nintendo didn't like this as it would have turned them into a second party developer on the format and rather than announcing the Sony-Nintendo partnership announced a Phillips-Nintendo where practically the same deal applied but Nintendo took the role of Sony. Sony wanted to work with Sega but they laughed them out of the door. Nintendo filed court case after court case to try stop them from using the tech, eventually Sony sacked of the SNES elements and turned Play Station into PlayStation and kicking Nintendo out of the equation and released the console we know of now.
I was googling around and found this video. I'm sure if its accurate or not. I figure it might be slightly biased since it's on a Nintendo youtube channel but who knows.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivJlZCjfxfI
Is this how things really went?
What'a your point? Nintendo gave all that profit away to their investors. It's one of the reasons why they barely have any presense in the market.
Doesn't change the fact that since the Playstation, Nintendo has still made more money in the gaming sector than Sony. So this Phillips/Sony/Nintendo issue did not destroy Nintendo.
It depends. Sony was able to use the PS3 to push Blu-Ray as the major next-gen media of choice. Should all the royalties they get from Blu-Ray be tied to that? Nintendo is a gaming company, period. Microsoft and Sony have gaming divisions. If MS took a loss in Xbox but was able to push Windows 10 into everyone's homes by using the Xbox and Windows sales went insane...that wouldn't show up in a random missing context excel spreadsheet.
The biggest what-if in modern gaming history is probably "what if Sony & Nintendo end up making the Nintendo Playstation", and for good reason. You probably never have Sony enter the market as a competitor, which means you never have Microsoft enter the market as a competitor. Does Sega survive by virtue of being the only other alternative? Does someone else (Apple? Google? Samsung?) enter the gaming market? What happens if MS ends up concentrating what ended up being their Xbox efforts into PC?
The ripple effects of that one decision are bonkers.
...
Really interesting story here. How many people know that the original processor for the PlayStation 3 is sitting in the XBOX 360? There's a lot people don't know. Also, the G4 video about the DreamCast is ace too.
There is no point in revisionist history. All I noted was Nintendo still made more money in the gaming sector than Sony did since the inception of the Playstation. The impact of blu ray was mitigated by the rise of digital content. I'm not sure that was worth billions of dollars in losses.
Thug lifeWell I haven't watched the video since it's like an hour long but from what I can remember Nintendo wasn't happy with the deal that was going on with Sony. So they went behind Sony's back and worked up a new deal with Phillips. Sony went on to CES and introduced the Nintendo Playstation thinking everything was fine. And the next day Nintendo announced they were dropping the Playstation and working with Sony rival Phillips instead. Sony was so angry over how Nintendo fucked them over that they decided to enter the console market and take on Nintendo. They then went on to crush Nintendo with the Playstation. Pretty good revenge story.
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How do you explain this then?
I fucking love this data table, it makes the constant Nintendo is doomed talk even more amusing.
Pretty sure Playstation overall has made them Sony quite a bit of money (gonna point out that the excel chart cuts off right as the Wii drops off a cliff...incomplete data for the win). Not as much as Nintendo; but it is also unfair to compare a company that is solely invested in gaming versus companies that have divisions (and in MS' case, relatively small divisions) of gaming. Nintendo's made a lot of money, sure; but the decision to move away from Sony probably cost them billions (maybe tens of billions) of dollars in the long run. (Especially since the N64/GC generations went handily to Sony).
But, then you get into the idea of whether gaming ever becomes nearly as big without the entrance of Sony (and later, Microsoft) into the market. Insane and fun to think about.
I fucking love this data table, it makes the constant Nintendo is doomed talk even more amusing.
Note; the last three years (2012 - 2014) would be
2012: -532 million US
2013: -456 million US
2014: +207 million US
Assuming those are operating profits. The chart doesn't say what those numbers are from.
Note: If we're sticking purely to "gaming" - not sure how Nintendo classifies the Amiibos. Those are primarily responsible for Nintendo's profitability in FY 2014 (March 31st 2014 to March 31st 2015).
Nah, what's funnier is seeing charts like that and then hearing the excuse that Nintendo can't afford to compete on specs, online, third-party deals, or anything else. Can't have it both ways.
Well I haven't watched the video since it's like an hour long but from what I can remember Nintendo wasn't happy with the deal that was going on with Sony. So they went behind Sony's back and worked up a new deal with Phillips. Sony went on to CES and introduced the Nintendo Playstation thinking everything was fine. And the next day Nintendo announced they were dropping the Playstation and working with Sony rival Phillips instead. Sony was so angry over how Nintendo fucked them over that they decided to enter the console market and take on Nintendo. They then went on to crush Nintendo with the Playstation. Pretty good revenge story.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mTi5EaocGaYSony made fun of Mario.
I can't perfectly predict what would have happened if this deal never went through. What I can do is point out that Sony made much less money in gaming than Nintendo did.
Sony may have lost more than they gained with Playstation. Sony also invested a lot of resources in the Playstation brand. Those resources could have gone to other areas of the company. Now their TV business is failing, their mobile phone business is underperforming, they sold their laptop division and they also sold their original headquarters.
Sony outcompeted Nintendo in the home console video game market and were subsequently outcompeted by Samsung and Apple in the consumer electronics market.
Adjusted for inflation Sony's revenue in 1994, when the first playstation launched, was greater than its revenue in 2014.
Is Playstation the sole factor to blame for Sony's collapse? No definitely not. However, I do believe it may have been a distraction that Sony could have done without.
It speaks volume on how much of a well-oiled machine Nintendo is that in their first and biggest loss they posted in a year they still lost less money than the best year during the first 4 years of the PS3 by Sony.
To be completely fair, that's also a reason why Nintendo is so profitable.
I was googling around and found this video. I'm sure if its accurate or not. I figure it might be slightly biased since it's on a Nintendo youtube channel but who knows.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivJlZCjfxfI
Is this how things really went?
The lesson of all this is: you don't fuck with crazy Ken!
Kutaragi built the SNES sound chip without his bosses permission because he wanted to make videogames better. When it was done and essentially sold to Nintendo, then he convinced his bosses that it was a good idea. This made Sony a "partner" and gave them access to the inner workings of the SNES. Sony was also apparently able to make Sony-branded SNES hardware, like controllers (prototype Sony-branded SNES controllers were seen with the original Play Station), because Nintendo didn't care about hardware, software was where the real money was. And more hardware equals more software. I suspect that the sound chip/partner deal was all the contract that was needed for these events to happen.
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Nintendo blinked 1st.
Very interesting. Any kind of sources for your story?
Ken Kutaragi slept with Miyamoto's wife.