Playstation 3 In the Works 368
Kredal writes "The Independent is running a story about Sony's work on a new console, being built around online games, such as Everquest Adventures and Final Fantasy 11. No word on backwards compatability, but expect it to be the X-Box killer if it is."
FF11 already has me lusting.
Old PS2 Commercial (Score:3, Funny)
Tim
Re:Old PS2 Commercial (Score:2)
Oh wait. Inhalable spores... Right.
no playstation 6 or 7 not 9. (Score:2)
It also states "research efforts for PlayStation 3 are focusing on distributed computing"....
-- wow a beowulf cluster of PS3's.....
Re:no playstation 6 or 7 not 9. (Score:2)
Jeremy
enough already! (Score:3, Insightful)
Speculation like this killed the Dreamcast. Oh.. the PS2's gonna be sooo good.
Then you get lame kiddies saying stuff like "I don't want an Xbox. I'm getting a PS3, it will wipe the floor with the Xshite"
Eventually people nned to buy a current system. The best time to do so is now. Once a console has been released and then discounted (to rip off the earlier adopters) it's worth buying.
I rate the Xbox as better than the PS2, but not enough software is out there yet. People are still going nuts for MGS2 on the PS2, but it takes like a day to finish it on your first time out.
Buy an Xbox/PS2 and be done with it.
The news of the PS3 is cool, but christ, don't wait for it!
Old cliche (Score:2, Insightful)
Then you get lame kiddies saying stuff like "I don't want an Xbox. I'm getting a PS3, it will wipe the floor with the Xshite" ... yeah, in about 2 years! What are you going to do until then, keep playing your N64?
This is much like an old urban legend, made popular through Scott Adams' Dilbert books. Once upon the time there was a company trying to sell some hideously expensive piece of hardware. Prospective clients were wary, so the salesteam tells them "Hey, Every single concern you have will be fixed by Version 2 of this hardware!" The clients then do not buy version 1, and bide their time.
Just about the time Version 2 comes out, the clients come back, and the salesteam says "Here's Version 2! ..but man, Version 3 is *really* gonna rock!" Clients then hold off to wait till Version 3 is ready because of the raw cost of the hardware and the legacy nature of the product.
Meanwhile, the company goes bankrupt because everybody's locked in a holding pattern.
This tired old legend doesn't really fit in right with the console market, as these toys are tools for entertainment -- not legacy hardware that you're expected to keep and maintain for five or ten years, such as cars and houses. Sure, some of us gamers do, but it's not the expectation.
Re:Old cliche (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Old cliche (Score:4, Interesting)
I mean, what if oh, say -- Microsoft announced it was upgrading the 16-bit GUI on top of it's operating system with amazing features and a wonderful new interface... and hyped it so much that people thought they needed to buy it for their toasters... that wouldn't hurt a rival (better) operating system for the year or two it took them to ship something, now would it?
Nah... never happen...
Re:enough already! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:enough already! (Score:2)
Speculation like that is not what killed the Dreamcast. Sega killed the Dreamcast, just like they kill all of their systems. Which is unfortunate, because I like the DC, it doesn't compare to the PS2, but there are some really fun games on it.
Re:enough already! (Score:2)
Re:enough already! (Score:2)
The timeline goes like:
From a US point of view, Sega hasn't had much luck with home hardware. But worldwide and in the arcade, it's not quite as ugly as it looks.
You forgot the GameGear (Score:2, Insightful)
GameGear was one of the coolest handhelds I've ever seen. Way ahead of its time, IMHO. It was a portable, full-colour handheld gaming system with a backlit LCD. You could play the thing in full colour in a pitch dark room, out of the box. What systems, even today, can make such a claim?
It's drawbacks were lack of games, pretty pricey, and it ate batteries like Oprah goes through Twinkies.
Re:You forgot the GameGear (Score:2)
And I won't mention the ill-fated Virtual Boy ;)
Re:enough already! (Score:2)
Eventually people nned to buy a current system
I disagree, but not for the reasons that you might think.
I have yet to buy a system at it's launch. Never. I don't see the point in buying this hardware that can only play games when the price will most likely drop almost half in 18 months or so. That's about the time I usually buy. Granted, this hasn't happened with the Playstation 2 yet but it has to eventually (especially with a PS3 in the works). This way I already know what key titles to get for the system, and the system still has life in it for new surprises.
Re:enough already! (Score:2)
So what exactly is your judgement criteria for a gaming console?
Hardly surprising (Score:2, Insightful)
Anway, the article is really quite boring, nothing yet unknown is revealed, and of course there is not even a vague release date for the PS3.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
This just in... (Score:5, Insightful)
But seriosuly, if noone expected Sony to do anything to move to the PS3 some day, they don't understand buisness much. And online is the future by what everyone is saying, so makes sense.
With more and more gamers playing consoles, expect some expectations of faster upgrades and such to start occuring.
Re:This just in... (Score:2, Funny)
the PS4 will be fully modular so that you can swap out an old part with a newr faster and better one. isn't that one of the cool things abot the Xbox? the Video card is removable?
Re:This just in... (Score:2)
Re:This just in... (Score:2)
When to announce new products? (Score:2)
Then people will buy the PS2 because it's cheaper than it was before and rest assured that their investment in games will carry through to the next generation platform.
damn-it!!!! (Score:2, Funny)
I told her that the console market is not like the PC market. Consoles stay around for a few years. I then pointed to the fact that the PS1 had been around since the early 90's.
now what the hell am I going to say to get this sucker!!!!
Re:damn-it!!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Just buy it. Trust me, it's easier to get forgiveness than permission.
Re:damn-it!!!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:damn-it!!!! (Score:2)
Usually something like "hey, i'm the one who gets the bills paid around here" usually does the trick.
You've got a job... right?
Backwards Compatability (Score:4, Insightful)
FoonDog
Re:Backwards Compatability (Score:2, Interesting)
Microsofts endeavor to improve Windows over time was saddled with the problems that existed in the original MS DOS. Only by abandoning technologies of the past at some point can the designers expect to move forward with real innovation.
The way around that of course is to run virtual machines that abstract the software from the hardware. But using a virtual machine architecture has its own caveats, like adding additional complexity.
Personally, I would prefer that designers of game systems just avoid backward compatability issues. If there is some game from an older system that I want to play, it is likely that I have that older system to play it with anyway. I would rather designers focus on innovation than on life support for aging technology.
Re:Backwards Compatability (Score:2)
not here (Score:2)
Moreover, in a previous slashdot article it was stated that the PS3 is basically 4 PS2 units smashed into one case. Again, backwards compatability will be trivial to impliment.
Re:Backwards Compatability (Score:2)
Both failed miserably (in the case of the Genesis the otherwise cheap add-on failed), and for the most part I remember people not bothering, because at that point, who in their right mind would play the "old" games when you had this new and powerful system in front of you?
Have video gamers really changed that much? If the old games are still that much fun for gamers, why buy the new console in the first place - most new games, especially on a system like the PS2, are just graphical updates of existing genres.
Re:Backwards Compatability (Score:2)
Me, for one. I never had a PSx (also didn't have a DVD player), so when the PS2 came out I was all over the ability to play all of those old classic games I missed while I was in school, like Final Fantasy Tactics (translated by team All Your Base), or Bushido Blade. The emulation isn't perfect unfortunatly (Bushido blade had a minor graphics glitch) and the high speed disk spin option tends to break cutscenes on some games (Legend of Mana for instance). The texture smoothing feature is kind of nice, except I play mostly sprite based games.
I hope it works ;-) (Score:4, Funny)
I hope it works better than the PS/2 Linux kit I just got and have to RMA back to Sony. ;-)
My tongue-in-cheek experiences are available her [angrymoose.org] for your reading enjoyment.
Keeping costs down and still beating Microsoft. (Score:2)
Re:Keeping costs down and still beating Microsoft. (Score:5, Interesting)
I think consoles are so sucessful because they are simple. Users don't need to worry about how much RAM they have, or how big their hard drive is. Plug in the game and it works.
Nintendo is still around because they realized that people buy the games. While Sony was out hyping the graphics power of the PS2, Nintendo was showing off the games. Games are how systems make money. Either by selling tons, and generating licence money, or by being great, and forcing people to buy the system to play it.
I should also add that NO add on for consoles has ever been sucessful. Why should Sony waste resources to cater to a very small percentage of the people that would buy it?(blah blah blah, Linux kit. I know about the linux kit. However, its what? $400?? that brings the cost of a PS2 and the linux kit to $700! that's just silly. For $700 I could have a full PC with a TV card to hook up.)
Re:Keeping costs down and still beating Microsoft. (Score:2)
If it's an honest mistake, then, okay--just check the numbers better next time.
If you are presenting misinformation as a FUD tatic, then just go home, stick your head in the toilet, and blow bubbles until you pass out.
There have been successful add-ons. (Score:2)
That's the common wisdom, like "consoles are always sold at a loss," but it's really not true.
Some examples of successful add-ons:
With the exception of the analog pads, which were eventually made the new standard, it's more accurate to say that add-ons tend to be at least an order of magnitude less successful than the parent console. So you need a big enough consumer base to support your niche markets. The current playstation 2 has a big enough market to support an online adapter as long as the hardware works. It's been proven by the Dreamcast that enough gamers will sign up for good online games to make it profitable, and the Dreamcast market was much smaller than PS2's.
I agree with the rest of your post, though. Especially that it's really all about the games.
Jon Acheson
Re:Keeping costs down and still beating Microsoft. (Score:3, Flamebait)
Any semblance to a PC is a prime reason for me NOT to buy a console. I hate PC gaming, and have hated it since the games went to hardware 3d. I've spent more time chasing bugs in drivers that create odd artifacts in games (or lock the whole machine) than I have actually playing games in the last few years. Anything that will allow console game developers to get away with the stupid 'wait for the next patch' crap is a step in the wrong direction.
Re:Keeping costs down and still beating Microsoft. (Score:2)
I don't need simplicity and my ATI Radeon works flawlessly (and I hear nVidia is even better).
Re:Keeping costs down and still beating Microsoft. (Score:2, Funny)
Have you ever actually PLAYED Everquest?
Steeeve shouts, 'DING! Level 2!'
Baddaz shouts, 'HELP'
Luzer shouts, 'SOW plz!!!'
Zippyshorts shouts, 'We can't help you if you don't give us your LOC'
Luzer shouts, 'SOW PLZ!!!'
Regdum shouts 'WTS Spiderling Silk'
Splattt shouts 'What Level are Kodiaks?'
Luzer shouts, 'I NEED SOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'
Splattt shouts 'Can Anyone help me find my corpse?'
Re:Keeping costs down and still beating Microsoft. (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm sure the final design of the PS3 is going to have a hard drive, a decent amount of RAM, and an Ethernet port.
You mean like the X-Box does already?
Hardware doesn't sell consoles, GAMES do. And that's why the X-Box is currently failing. That, and an overwhelming desire from anyone with the slightest bit of technical savvy to see Microsoft fail.
Just wait for Linux to be available on the X-Box, and it'll fly off the shelves. Look at how popular the Dreamcast is now, even after it's been discontinued. A cheap bundle of PC hardware makes for a good hackers toy.
Broadband & Backward Compatability... (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, the issue of backward compatability? It's cool, but if you're going to make a new gaming system, don't worry about the old stuff. If the gaming world has taught people anything it's, "don't worry, I'll buy anything just to play that." How many people have bought new graphics cards because of ONE game?
Sure, a developer would love to see their PS2 games run on the PS?, but would they rather do more with their new titles? You betcha. Game developers love their work, and seeing it fully realized is a better feeling than knowing that it is more compatable, but you had to sacrifice the vision of the game. Remember, we're not making a word processor here.
Cheers.
XBox 2,3,4,5..... (Score:2, Insightful)
How much will MS have to spend to develop the XBox2? Well, let's see... Get a faster mobo, fast gpu, and faster cpu. Done! And it is backwards compatible with the old one already! And the development tools won't require learning some fancy new architecture. MS has stumbled out of the gate, but long term who really has the advantage here?
Re:XBox 2,3,4,5..... (Score:3, Insightful)
You seem to suggest that Microsoft won't have to spend much to develop the next XBox, because they can just use off-the-shelf PC components. I'm afraid if they take that approach then they really will be a failure.
Using off the shelf components to create Personal Computers has been the norm up until now. But the domestic product market is different. Firstly, in this kind of business it is really important to keep the cost per unit down as low as possible. Really really low. You're talking about selling tens of millions of units, which are all identical. That often means custom built chips and boards. Secondly, how the unit itself looks is really important. This is something that Microsoft has yet to learn. It may not be a deciding factor in the US if a domestic product is big and ugly, but it is in the rest of the world, and it certainly is in Japan. Finally, system stablity is really important with domestic products. PC users are used to the things screwing up, but domestic users aren't. Microsoft has already discovered the expense of trivial problems with domestic products with CDs being scratched. I'm sure Microsoft aren't used to people returning their products to stores and demanding refunds. With domestic goods, that happens, and it's extremely costly.
So if Microsoft doesn't heavily invest in developing XBox2 then they won't be in the consumer appliance market very long. Different rules apply there.
Do you know who the world's largest consumer electronics maker is? Matsushita Electric Industrial Co. Sony are second to them (although rapidly catching up). And my point is? The consumer electronics market is different to the software market. Substantially different. And the XBox is a consumer electronics product. Microsoft has entered a whole different arena than where they are used to playing. They have already made some serious mistakes with the XBox, and don't seem to understand the consumer electronics market when they declare things like the next version of the XBox will be the centre of entertainment in a home. The big electronics manufacturers learnt long ago that combining different functions into a single consumer product (e.g. TV with integrated DVD, combined TV and Hi-fi) isn't as sensible an idea as it sounds.
I'm not saying that Microsoft won't make it. They might. But their solid track record in the software world isn't going the help them much in this battle.
Oh, and 4 legs to turn it into a coffee table... (Score:2)
One is that the total size of the console is significantly larger than its competitors, which makes it a pain to fit into an already crowded entertainment center.
Also, the custom-designed PS2s and Gamecubes are apparently much cheaper to manufacture in bulk, because they have fewer parts.
Lastly, I don't see how designing a new mobo, gpu and cpu is necessarily simpler than designing a new console-style console.
Jon Acheson
Re:Oh, and 4 legs to turn it into a coffee table.. (Score:2)
It's about the R&D dollars, son. Sony is apparently throwing what, a billion, 2 billion dollars into the PS3's development?
Microsoft on the other hand can cimply take advantage of Nvidia's huge R&D budget, and buy chips (at a bulk rate). No manufacturing processes to build, no R&D work and hiring. So much easier! At the same time, they get a product guaranteed to be competetive and successful in today's graphics market.
Same with a CPU and Motherboard - Microsoft again worked with NVidia, AMD, and Intel, and simply had those companies assemble a board with an AMD bus, an Intel processor, and an Nvidia chipset.
At the same time there is a decent budget at Microsoft to make sure the board is 100% stable. Because it's a PC, it had a semblance of an operating system on it, in the form of stripped-down Windows 2000 with DirectX.
All of the technologies come from other companies or parts of Microsoft, which means in the end R&D dollars are kept at a minimum.
The hardware can then be sold at a loss, while Microsoft still makes enough money on game sales to keep up with Sony, who is $$$ in the hole until they sell enough PS2's.
This strategy would work perfectly, of course, if all the good games actually came out for Xbox.... where is my Unreal Championship god damn it!
Re:XBox 2,3,4,5..... (Score:2)
insert "hey dude, you're getting an XBox!" comment here
Re:XBox 2,3,4,5..... (Score:2)
It also makes the hardware itself difficult to develop. Developing software for the PS2 is no walk in the park from what I've read. I could be wrong since I have done no development for it myself.
Do you really doubt that there will be an XBox2? Do you really think that it won't be backward compatible? Are you trolling here?
If off-the-shelf parts were so much worse than the custom-componentry of the PS2 then how is it that the XBox is as good as it is?
Did we expect detente? (Score:2)
Classics? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Classics? (Score:2, Funny)
They'll always be around.. (Score:2, Informative)
(And yes, I own the cartridges. heh.)
"expect it to be the X-Box killer"??? (Score:2, Funny)
(Wouldn't the PS2 be one, too?)
- A.P.
This is not news. (Score:3, Informative)
this is a shock (Score:5, Funny)
I have been caught completely off guard by similar reports on slashdot in the past. Apparently, Apple is planning a G5 processor (as if the G4 weren't fast enough!), Microsoft is supposedly working on an operating system to replace XP, and the 2.5 branch will not be the last iteration of the Linux kernel.
Price Drop on PS2 (Score:4, Insightful)
Also maybe Sony should take their time and develope a quality console that will meet the needs of the gaming public, even if it takes a few extra months to a year. They have already demonstrated their market dominence over the superior (hardware wise) machines of their competition. Points to consider, make it easier to program, anti-aliasing (!!!), ditch the 2 controller model (multi taps suck, four controller ports on board is great), for that matter peripherals on a console suck.
I look forward to the PS3, but please, take you time and give me something remotely worth the ammount money I am going to have to drop on this thing (and the ammount of time I am going to have to spend in line to get the damn thing on launch day)...
Re:Price Drop on PS2 (Score:2)
ah, to live in a perfect world. i wish more companies took the time to design products/software/etc right the first time.
sadly, i don't see it happening most of the time. time to market and bottom line pressures tend to mess with this ideal.
although, i feel that sony is in a good position to take their time. with the market dominance of the ps2 and the new wave of 3rd and 4th gen games coming out, the lifecycle of the ps2 could be quite long. i had a feeling that the installed base and maturity of games was going to be a huge hurdle for the xbox to overcome.
sony was prompted to ramp up work on the ps3 due to the power of the xbox, and now we see the xbox lagging behind. so the ps2 can hang with the xbox and the gamecube, and sony can do the ps3 right, here's to hoping.
and yes, please, 4 controller ports, please.
Re:Price Drop on PS2 (Score:2)
and to get the dvd capability you need an add-on as well.
microsoft really nickel-and-dimes you.
Re:Price Drop on PS2 (Score:2)
1 ps2 multitap is $35, plus 3 ps2 controllers at $35 each, is $140.
In what world is $140 less than $120?
Re:Price Drop on PS2 (Score:2)
Re:Price Drop on PS2 (Score:2)
Do you know why they beat the superior N64 with the original playstation? It's because they were first to market. Do you know why the PS2 is whumping the Gamecube and the X-box right now? It's because they were first to market. That's right. And you know why? Because little Jimmy will rush out and buy the first next-generation system that's available. And when the second comes out, he's a little hard up, and all his friends have a Sony anyway, and there are no good games for the second one yet.
So while it'd be nice if Sony could be like Debian, and take just a little longer to get everything right, it's clear that the real world doesn't work that way. And if the PS3 doesn't come out 6 months before the Nintendo gamesphere and the Microsoft Y-box, then Sony lose their all their advantage.
All this disregards the fact that it will take them as much time to design the PS3 with 4 ports as with 2 anyway. They don't come up with a design for 2 ports and then spend a couple of months tacking on the extra ones. What they are trying to do is meet a price point, and compromising on features where necessary. And I'm sure they are not unhappy that you have to spend more money on a multi-tap.
take you time and give me something remotely worth the ammount money I am going to have to drop on this thing
Since you have already professed you will buy this thing whether they give you 4 ports or not, why should they bother to add them? If it really matters to you, then bite the bullet and wait for the console that does have what you want. And no, they should not take their time, because then they would be in second place, regardless of technical merit.
not_cub
Re:Price Drop on PS2 (Score:2)
The Playstation and the PS2 both had something the other's didn't, and that is a large library of games that matter to the mass market. That's where your going to make your money. XBOX appeals to graphics junkies and hardware l337 freaks, the GC to children, Nintendo Fanboys, and the both of them appeal to hardcore gamers. The casual gamer is not going to spend $300 on a console just because they might miss that one or maybe two games for that system that appeal to them, they are going to write it up as a shame and move on.
As far the four port thing goes, well lets just call it my wishlist. I am not really expecting Sony to read my post on /. and say, "Holy Shit, this guy is right, we need to re-design the PS3 ASAP."
Re:Price Drop on PS2 (Score:2)
I'm afraid the laws of supply and demand just won't let them do that. You see, when you constantly outsell your competitors by large margins every month, even when your competitors may have newer hardware and a $100 lower price tag, you don't drop the price.
As for the second point, I don't think PS2 hype damaged the PSOne that much, if at all. I don't think they're too worried about people not buying their current console. It's just the way the business works.
I do hope that the new console will be backwards compatible.
Sony and RealNetworks in "strategic alliance" (Score:5, Informative)
Real has put out a press release here [realnetworks.com], which says: "Sony plans to adopt these combined digital distribution solutions in a variety of networked CE products such as Sony's networked audio products and Sony Computer Entertainment's PlayStation2 computer entertainment system."
The Wall Street Journal notes that the deal brings together two Microsoft rivals - the WSJ story [wsj.com] requires $$$+registration, but the basics are:
The companies didn't announce specific product agreements, but said their research and development groups will regularly collaborate on developing new technologies. Sony said it would adopt RealNetworks' media technologies broadly in a variety of consumer electronics devices with network connections to personal computers and the Internet, and RealNetworks will consider using a Sony antipiracy format in its software.
While the financial side of the deal is small and RealNetworks is in no immediate need of cash, the investment gives Sony at least a symbolic stake in the future of RealNetworks. RealNetworks competes fiercely with Microsoft in the market for Internet audio and video software, and it has joined other companies in accusing Microsoft of anticompetitive practices that threaten their businesses. Sony and Microsoft, meanwhile, became archcompetitors in the videogame market with Microsoft's introduction late last year of the Xbox, a heavily promoted rival to Sony's market-leading PlayStation 2.
Dave Fester, a Microsoft general manager, said the alliance with Sony wouldn't affect the appeal of Microsoft's own media software to electronics companies, but adding that it could "drive a wedge between Real and other consumer electronics manufacturers."
Re:Sony and RealNetworks in "strategic alliance" (Score:2, Insightful)
But seriously. RealNetworks is a terribly anticonsumer company. They make crap software and use deceptive practices to snare consumers into their subscription trap. And then they share your personal information with "selected partners." It's evil I tell you, evil.
But sadly, it is the direction in which a lot of internet companies are heading these days. I respect the right to make a buck, but not through deceptive practices that take advantage of some consumers.
Get a clue. (Score:2)
If you don't need a clue, then... (Score:2)
Re:Sony and RealNetworks in "strategic alliance" (Score:2)
Do you think Microsoft liked the fact that the Sony games development machine is running Linux? I hardly think so...
Rumor on the street that the PS3 console itself will be running miniture version of Linux..
Xbox 2 In the Works (Score:3, Informative)
(Of course it will be compatible - the Xbox is basically a PC.)
Remember how ridiculously overhyped PS2 was?
I expect the same with PS3. But why does it have to start now??
As for me, I don't own a console. The only reason I'd get one would be the games, not the technical superiority of a particular console when compared to another or when compared to PCs (which is simply not happenning anyway).
For example, there are no fighting games on the PC (Virtua Fighter, Dead or Alive, Soul Calibur etc.).
But that's about it - I couldn't care less for the RPGs and the racing sims are comparable to what I get on the PC.
The FPS genre is pretty much nonexistent on the consoles (it may be starting to change).
Maybe I just don't get the console culture.
-jfedor
Re:Xbox 2 In the Works (Score:2)
Re:Xbox 2 In the Works (Score:2)
Why is Sony better than MS, hmmm better business practices, better quality.. those are enough reasons for me.
*NO* NO NO NO *NO *NO* NOOOOO!!!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Guys, MMORPG's are the thin end of the wedge of subscription software.
MMORPG's are stupid, they're all designed to keep you playing forever doing inane tasks like character building, searching for stupid item X, *TO KEEP YOU SUBSCRIBING*. I want games with a discreet end. Play game, win game, game over.
And my next question, I still play classic games like Monkey Island, DOTT, Sam 'N Max, umm, Quest for Glory, kings quest ... that I bought 10 years ago. 10+x years from now, how will I play PS3 games that require an online server?
disgruntled gamer/game industry employee
Re:*NO* NO NO NO *NO *NO* NOOOOO!!!!! (Score:2)
Re:*NO* NO NO NO *NO *NO* NOOOOO!!!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
It's a wonder no Sega fans started a class action lawsuit or tried to legally force them to keep the servers up.
Damn it, I want legislation that makes it illegal to stop running servers like that unless either the cutoff date is divulged on the packaging, or the company makes the server configurable and makes the source public.
PS2 thought (Score:2)
Wait for after E3, then buy a PS2 (Score:3, Insightful)
PS2 has enough good games out now to justify buying one, and more are on the way. Plus there are many games available used. That makes it a wise buy.
Wait for PS3? Why not wait for PS4 while you're at it? IMHO, it's better to wait until after the first price cut for a console, then jump on board.
Jon Acheson
Earlier news (Score:2, Funny)
Don't expect it before 2006... (Score:2, Informative)
Ok (Score:2, Interesting)
Thats like saying the playstation 2 was a supernintendo killer. Of course its going to be better then the xbox. What, do you think its going to come out in a few months? This thing is atleast 2 years away. I am sure by the time the playstation 3 comes out microsoft will be right there with a new console too.
This is as bad as those people who say the xbox killed the dreamcast. Of course it did, it came out 2 years later!
More technology = depressing (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:More technology = depressing (Score:2)
Maybe it's an exaggerated example, but do you really want Pong on your latest and greatest console? Of course not, you want it to take full advantage of the hardware, and not be the same old thing. While the games that you're talking about were indeed great, and probably easier to learn, their time is now unfortunately past. 3D is basically a requirement these days, and online capability will be as well in the next few years. Both of those things mean more complicated controls, and more time to master. But ultimately, the great games will always be worth their learning curves.
You also can't just say that before games were all about quality and now it's more quantity. There were plenty of crap titles that were released in the past for all consoles, you just don't remember them b/c you only remember the great stuff. Similarly, it's easy to say now that all you see if a ton of crap when you look around, but a few years from now, we won't remember most of those titles.
FF 11 online? No thanks. (Score:2)
I've put my time in a couple of MMORPGs, at one point putting in a good 10 hours a day for several months. For what? So I can be just another semi-powerful warrior among thousands of others all trying to accomplish the same quests? Running into the same people, who just like me are trying to escape our "real" lives for a few moments... why do I really want to talk to them? If I wanted to talk to them I could do so on ICQ for free, or head down to the local pub and meet with my friends.
As much as I didn't like the story driven nature of FFX, it was fantastic. The conversations between Tidus and Yuna, Auron's mysterious demeanor, poor Lulu... that's why I bought and played FFX. Why I bought every other FF game. Why I play RPGs. Why I no longer play MMORPGs. I don't want to meet a group of heros and listen to how they had a miserable day at work, how the dog shit on the rug, how the car needs an overhaul. How there's a group of campers by the mystical sword each one of us needs for a quest and how we're going to have to get 6mil gold apiece to buy from the campers. I want to meet characters who were brought together by some epic destiny, not those who happen to live in the same time zone. I want to hear scripted conversations that took months of thought and use professional voiceovers, not the half-hearted attempts at role playing and old English phrases lifted from "Robin Hood".
FF 11 online? No thanks.
IBM also developed GameCube's chip (Score:2)
IBM -- mercenaries of the gaming world?
Microsoft gets a taste of its own medicine. (Score:2)
Let's face it, so far the Xbox has been a disaster and Sony want to make sure it stays that way even with the recent price cuts. What better way to make sure of that than cut their own prices and drop heavy hints that a PS3 might be just around the corner?
Of course realistically no PS3 is going to appear before Christmas 2003 unless its a revamped PS2 with a harddrive, but anyone thinking of getting an XBox is likely to think again.
The XBox has a serious problem on its hands now. It's still the most expensive of the games consoles, and the games are expensive and boring. It's rapidly becoming the next Dreamcast.
Get it right (Score:2, Interesting)
There are all these links to this Sony stuff here [gamefu.org]. I mean comeon, get the facts straight.
Re:Promises, promises (Score:3, Insightful)
The hop/skip/jump to MMORPGs (Score:2, Interesting)
Final Fantasy 11 is going to finish me.
I say this because I am, unashamedly, Squaresoft's Bitch. Anything they sell, I purchase. Chocobo Dungeon? Got that. Vagrant Story? Yup. 3D World Runner? Sure, child's play.
I can't pass up a Final Fantasy title, not after the first ten have given me such endless hours of fun and happiness. Turning it into an MMORPG just adds an addictive edge that may well be the end of me.
Re:Slow hardware cycle - Better software? (Score:2)
Re:PS3 sucks (Score:2)
Re:X-Box killer? (Score:2)
Do you think that PS2 developers are going to sit on their hands? The PS2 library is not only already much larger then the Xbox library, but it's growing faster then the Xbox library too. If you've already got a PS2, then there's no reason to buy an Xbox, and Sony's sold (is selling) a lot of PS2s.
Anyway, now that I know that the Xenosaga games are coming out for PS2, I know I made the right choice!
Re:X-Box killer? (Score:2)
Re:That's the problem right there (Score:2)
When you say "now," that makes me think you're of the "Games were so much better back when [some system from the mid to late 1990s] came out" mindset. But games have been driven by hardware as long as I can remember. Google searches will turn up big hardware debates in rec.games.video from 1990 about the TurboGrafx-16 vs. the Sega Genesis. And for many people PC gaming has always been about hardware, which is why people are willing to buy $400 video cards, complain that consoles are too expensive, and suffer through endless bleeding edge driver updates.
Re:ARR MATEY (Score:2)
:)
Re:XBox is already killed... (Score:2, Troll)
And I wouldn't hold my breathe for the new Mario (Mario walks around with a water cannon trying to remove graffiti (??)) or the new Super Cartoony Zelda, or the first person Metroid (that is just capitalizing on Halo and the FPS craze.)
I'm sorry, I'd rather be playing the new World Series Baseball, Halo, Spiderman (on the best of the multi-console translations), the new Toe Jam & Earl game (how many of you remember that old Genesis game,) NFL Fever, Midtown Madness 3, Max Payne (I'm sorry, the game is DESIGNED for a control pad, not keyboard+mouse,) Morrowind, Project Ego, POW, etc etc etc.
Yes Yes, the PS2 has great games too (although it has games like Britney's Dance Beat too) and so does the gamecube (currently, all three of them.) But the only reason everyone is trashin the xbox is because it's from microsoft.
I mean, come on... I'm hearing comments like "It's too fucking big." WHO THE FUCK CARES? If it plays games better than any other system than who cares if it's about 15% bigger than the PS2? My tivo is fucking huge but I don't complain about it's size when I talk about functionality. A comment like that has no basis other than resentment and bias against Microsoft (oh, and the US too since apparently that's a US-only design trait.)
The XBox is a great system with great games. So is the PS2 and so is the GC. Less anti-microsoft, anti-us rhetoric... oh wait, this is
Re:XBox is already killed... (Score:2)
Mario vs. JSRF (Score:2)
Is that what it is? Then I want a multiplayer version with Mario against the gang from Jet Grind Radio (Dreamcast) or Jet Set Radio Future (xbox). For the uninitiated, it's a Sega game that lets you control a gang of graffiti-sprayin', cop-avoiding' inline skaters. Think of the possibilities!
I feel the same way (Score:2)
It'll happen more quickly than you think. I can't wait until it does as then game makers will have to concentrate on playability as much as they do now on FX.
In the meantime, vendors like Sony really *need* to provide backwards compatibility for all games. That's been the primary fly in my ointment over the years. Sure, I want the shiny new console with the new games. But I also want my old games. Those, after all, represent most of the investment we all make as gamers. The console is just a delivery mechanism.
Memory Stick is a good idea, but not on gamepad. (Score:2)
What I want to know is, why have a memory card slot for each controller? I've never used the ones on the multi-tap, ever.
Just put 2 memory stick slots in the console (for trading saves), and you're good.
Jon Acheson
Re:Nintendo GamePentagon is going to kick PS3's bu (Score:3, Insightful)
It is a GameCube, not a GameSquare, thus GamePentagon would not be the natural progression.
Honestly, my vote would be for GameSphere. Boxy shapes are so 2001... or so 2002 for you Europeans who are always a year behind the times.
-gerbik