I believe Nintendo came in 3rd by a pretty huge margin last gen, Dispite the Gamecube being my favourite of the bunch.
So I doubt Sony would drop out.
So I doubt Sony would drop out.
Tends to be a little bit of both, in my experience. There's nothing wrong with liking the 16-bit era. Hell, I still go back and play a lot of those games too. Some are great, some not so good, but I could say the same thing about current generation games. A return to the 16-bit wouldn't automatically entail better games. Just a lot of empty disc space, unless the games were absolutely massive.Hammeroj said:That's fine, but the sweeping generalizations and oversimplified explanations to them like "good", "better", "bad", "fun" and "not fun", I'm inclined to think that this is nothing more than nostalgia, or a severe case of closed-mindedness.
What I'm working off of in my post is information that I have defined as of this moment. It is fine to say that the PS3 will overtake the 360 by the end of the year, but it isn't something you can confirm. Added to this, you might consider that the PS3 was projected to overtake the 360 in 2011, and that didn't happen. Either way, just a thought exercise really. Just imagine what the video game world would be like with Sony gone.Mimsofthedawg said:By the end of the first quarter this year Sony will over take Microsoft, which means that by the time the rumored release of the next xbox comes out (holiday 2013) the PS3 will likely be 5-10 million units ahead. If Xbox's statements are to be believed, and the next Xbox will come out in holiday 2014 (which is also my bet) we're talking about a 10-20 million unit lead for the PS3.
EDIT: Upon rereading some articles, I've come back to say that my numbers are a bit off. Still, given the percentage increase of PS3 sales over the last three years, Sony is set to over take Microsoft in the next year or so, and neither will ever beat the wii this generation.
Okay, "a lot" was a stylistic mistake, it wasn't meant to mislead. Also, the very sense of a rumor is that it has no veracity. What we would call this thread is a thought exercise. Try and imagine a world where Sony pulled out of the market. However, if you are too caught up by the "BUT THAT WON'T HAPPEN!!1!!" of it all, feel free to not bother.Sylveria said:No, there have not been "a lot" of rumors. There's been one rumor originated by one guy who makes iphone games and thus has a vested interest in the console market going bye bye. That rumor was based on the possibility that a new console will not be announced at E3 this year; that's a long stretch of logic to assume that means no consoles will be made ever again. It is irresponsible to makes this sound like it has any veracity to it what-so-ever.jboking said:There has been a lot of rumors circulating about one of the big three console companies dropping out of the console race next generation.
Remember when we all used to play games because they were fun?LilithSlave said:*snip*
You are too optimistic that you think the new power will be used for anything other than the cheap thrill of better graphics. While graphics can be good and will be better at the moment they are focused on too much to the detriment of other parts and that is the way I think you are too optimistic about a new gen.Hammeroj said:In which way am I far too optimistic? Frankly, I'd be surprised if graphics technology on the level of the Unreal Engine 3 Demo ever reaches the general audience on a grand scale. I'm a pessimist like that, but I'll be happy if proven wrong, and certainly even the slightest possibility of this happening is exciting to me.Glademaster said:I think you are far too optimistic about extra processing power. Yes those graphics are nice but that will be the focus and not in the other which at the moment is sorely needed. For example, we could be doing more to push dedicated servers and 64+ man games on console for FPS games. Don't bother citing examples I know they exist but they need to exist in greater volume. Let's just hope at t he very and utmost least the former catches on and P2P in FPS games on consoles will die a horrible death and suffer for eternity in idea hell. In my opinion P2P has no place in these games.
This would be something worth buying a new console gen over.
And yes, I did say the new generation would allow the games to go bigger, which does include multi-player FPS games. It's one of the many new prospects.
How...exactly?Jailbird408 said:Playstation Vita.
Wait, fuck, that invokes mod wrath.
Actually, that puts Sony in the handheld market, not the console market. It's kind of how most don't consider the Nintendo DS to be part of this generation of consoles, but rather of this generation of handhelds. It is also why we didn't declare the next generation of handhelds when the 3DS came out.What I meant to say is that Sony cannot be completely out of the console race this genration, because their Playstation Vita is a console. A stupid console, but a console nonetheless.
And it has Katamari and Lumines games. Squee...!
Same here.Kitsuna10060 said:seeing as i have already with drawn from this console generation and pretty much gone PC, it would change nothing for me.
If things keep going like they're going, nex-gen games are gonna cost $69.99 (or possibly more)and take even longer to make. Adding in more dev-time and forcing devs and producers to sink more money into a game just to make it is bad for everyone. Less experimentation, less new IPs, more "safe games" and more of a barrier for smaller studios to get involved.Funkysandwich said:It's not just graphics that need extra processing, it's things like physics and more importantly, AI. If a new console generation means AI that is more interesting to play against, then I'm down.
It was suggested then in much the same way it is suggested now. Sony is catching up, they have a better software line-up(read: More Exclusives), they have a good chance of overtaking Microsoft. Same thing is being said about 2012. Sony is catching up, they have a better software line-up(read: More exclusives) and they have a good chance of overtaking Microsoft.Mimsofthedawg said:Ok then. two things:
I don't ever remember reading that the PS3 would over take it in 2011. I read that 2011 would be the year the PS3 began to rise, signaling in its eventual domination between it and the 360 (which this did happen), but not that it would succeed.
Completely agreedAt any rate, I sincerely feel the video game world would be worse off. In terms of video game narratives, Sony has been far more at the forefront than Microsoft. Also, competition is a good thing, and while many 360 players may not admit it (or might not be aware of it), several of the "innovations" found on the 360 were actually concepts presented by Sony first, and then taken by Microsoft. These are things such as Netflix, hulu, etc.
Likewise, Sony has taken things from microsoft. But the point is that they make eachother better. "Iron sharpens iron" type of thing.
With this, I don't know for sure if I agree. The reason is that we have seen the kind of tomfoolery that Microsoft gets into when they have a monopoly. We don't yet know what would happen with Sony in that situation. It could also be argued that without competition they could release more innovative things with their hardware without fear of backlash from another company. That isn't to say that competition isn't good or that iron doesn't sharpen iron, it is just a point to consider.If you asked me "What would it be like if Microsoft dropped out" (which I would consider far more likely given the fact that one's a software giant, the other a hardware giant) I'd say the same thing.
You are really grasping at straws here and you are so one sided I really don't see a point in arguing with you anymore.WhiteTigerShiro said:Buying-out exclusives that would have otherwise been multi-platform isn't something that I'd call good for the gaming industry. It falls back into the Bluray issue where it's less Sony doing something for gaming, and more just Sony doing something to help themselves.eyepatchdreams said:How about Sony knowing they lost exclusives to the competition and funded and bought out other developers to crank out AAA exclusive titles?
Didn't Konami make DDR? And Activision made Guitar Hero. So while I'll admit that my knowledge of that particular genre is limited (mostly because I rarely play them), those are the two titles I tend to think of when I think of "pioneering rhythm and music games".How about being pioneers in the Rhythm and Music Games genre?
Because they couldn't. Not literally, of course. They could have charged if they really wanted to, but they knew that it would have been a bad idea. Think about it, when the large majority of your target audience is already shelling-out $50 a year for a service with a competitor, how many of them do you think are going to be willing to shell-out even more for a newer service that they aren't fully sure of? Heck, this is something that MMOs learned long time ago. You think MMOs are going free-to-play because they're good people? No, because free-to-play with ads in the games are the only ways that most people will try/play a second MMO.Or how about not charging for the PSN network?
Same goes with Sony. Making PSN free was the only way to ensure that people even acknowledged it. It wasn't a good-natured moved on Sony's part, it was a defensive move in response to XBLA having already beaten them to the punch. PSN would have been a paid service if XBLA wasn't there already.
Still not seeing it. Of your three examples, one is a case of them doing the opposite of good, one is a case that's gonna need explanation if its true, and the other is a case of their hands being tied.Sony has done a lot for the gaming world regardless if you like Sony or not.
I would probably not be a part of console gaming for a generation or two until I was certain Microsoft values the hardware end of the game. Microsoft always goes cheap on manufacturer contracts signing deals with the lowest bid. One of the richest companies in the world and they won't pay to make a electronic with good hardware. This doesn't just attribute to the 360. Windows phone failed to compete because they were crap phones made in Samsungs basement to be able to budget the cheap ass contract that they made with Microsoft to get the winning bid. Microsoft doesn't value quality hardware. I like Microsoft, but they make so much garbage I ain't willing to pay upfront for anything hardware related released by them.jboking said:Edit: Probably worth saying at this point that I understand it is unlikely that Sony would pull out. think of this as a thought exercise. What would you do if it were to come true?