I think I'm going to launch this thread with a simple question, and possibly bad english:
Under what conditions are you willing to continue to invest in more or less outdated gaming systems?
To know how long you'd keep buying old gen consoles, you'd probably need to know what would actually make you stop buying such consoles, I think.
- Thirst for shinier graphics, more horsepower, greater physics and AI.
- Ego concerns. Sorry, I don't buy old stuff, it's for loosers. Don't laugh, I'm sure many think that way.
- Too expensive for what it is.
- No first/third party game support for old gen consoles.
- Lack of new multimedia functions added to old hardware.
Would you buy a console, handheld or not, with the power of the PS2 (for example), if it was sold at incredibly low prices?
For example, look at the Gamecube. It's still sold at $99. Would you buy it if interesting and exclusive games kept being released on this console, if the console was only $20-40 and each game $10-15?
Would it be a good example to look at the success of the God of War franchise on the PS2, for example?
Sure, the PS3 is not working, and Sony still support the PS2, and this were the conditions during which the GoWs were released.
But the Xbox360 was already there, with its load of hits. Ok, the PS2 market, with more than 119 million consoles, was largely implanted, but that could be the case for other consoles as well.
A spinoff of the GoW franchise comes on what is nothing more than a PS2 Lite, and people are more than willing to grab it. However, the PSP is the... err, "next gen" in handhelddom.
As a whole, the trend that was followed by the builders in the industry was that they would let their older consoles die, stop the services and the production of new games on them, and focus most ressources to favour the growth of their newer products.
This kind of mindset would have to change as well. But is it worth it?
Can a secondary or even tertiary old gen and, above all, low cost business be generated on this basis?
Are people really wanting to have various technological plateaus and have access to various levels of hardware, or is it just some passing trend?
Under what conditions are you willing to continue to invest in more or less outdated gaming systems?
To know how long you'd keep buying old gen consoles, you'd probably need to know what would actually make you stop buying such consoles, I think.
- Thirst for shinier graphics, more horsepower, greater physics and AI.
- Ego concerns. Sorry, I don't buy old stuff, it's for loosers. Don't laugh, I'm sure many think that way.
- Too expensive for what it is.
- No first/third party game support for old gen consoles.
- Lack of new multimedia functions added to old hardware.
Would you buy a console, handheld or not, with the power of the PS2 (for example), if it was sold at incredibly low prices?
For example, look at the Gamecube. It's still sold at $99. Would you buy it if interesting and exclusive games kept being released on this console, if the console was only $20-40 and each game $10-15?
Would it be a good example to look at the success of the God of War franchise on the PS2, for example?
Sure, the PS3 is not working, and Sony still support the PS2, and this were the conditions during which the GoWs were released.
But the Xbox360 was already there, with its load of hits. Ok, the PS2 market, with more than 119 million consoles, was largely implanted, but that could be the case for other consoles as well.
A spinoff of the GoW franchise comes on what is nothing more than a PS2 Lite, and people are more than willing to grab it. However, the PSP is the... err, "next gen" in handhelddom.
As a whole, the trend that was followed by the builders in the industry was that they would let their older consoles die, stop the services and the production of new games on them, and focus most ressources to favour the growth of their newer products.
This kind of mindset would have to change as well. But is it worth it?
Can a secondary or even tertiary old gen and, above all, low cost business be generated on this basis?
Are people really wanting to have various technological plateaus and have access to various levels of hardware, or is it just some passing trend?