U.S. Game Sales Slip Marginally 39
Thanks to ZDNet/Reuters for their article stating that sales of game software for June dropped 9 percent in the U.S. compared to the previous year, "..reflecting fewer hit titles and a year-earlier tally that was helped by sharp price cuts on game consoles." Hardware sales also fell, and analyst Edward Williams suggests that "..the rate of sell-through suggests that a platform price cut this fall is increasingly likely as the hardware companies try to achieve targeted year-end installed bases." Elsewhere in the article, it's also suggested the hardware manufacturers may "..discount [hardware] more aggressively in order to boost sales of the more lucrative games."
What do they expect ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What do they expect ? (Score:1)
Are... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Are... (Score:2)
Compare that to today, where the last 5-10 games I've played, I've also been legally licensed. I'm older. I'm waaay richer. And I actually care to be within the law.
So if the game companies are going to blame falling profits on rising piracy, I think they're inverting the historical trend.
Re:Are... (Score:2)
Source: ESA [theesa.com] (formerly IDSA).
Any other questions? ;)
Re:A lot worse than 'marginally' (Score:2)
1) It's summer.
2) Not a lot of games come out during the summer.
3) The games that have come out have been disappointing (Enter the Matrix, Lara Croft)
4) The world is holding it's collective breath waiting for HL2 and Doom3 and the rest of the Christmas titles.
It doesn't take a fancy analyst and his crystal ball to figure that out.
You didn't have a summer last year? (Score:2)
Greatest Hits games (Score:1, Offtopic)
And before we spin into an off-topic arguement, I would be infavor of impeachment if our next choice (Cheney) wasn't more of a corporate man. Bush
Crash? (Score:2, Insightful)
It won't be good to see the current contenders go under. But I WOULD like to be able to afford games now that I will be going to college, and I would also love for another Nintendo (Or maybe Nintendo all over again) to completely revolutionize the market again.
Am I stupid? Hey, look at my sig...
Yea Right... (Score:3, Insightful)
Doom III (PC),
Half-Life 2 (PC),
Fable (X-Box),
FF:Crystal Chronicles (GC)
It is summer.... duh (Score:1, Insightful)
This 'slow' period is part of the natural yearly cycle.
Re:It is summer.... duh (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course, as another poster pointed out, there are a good number of big name titles slated for a fall release, so it's quite possible that some people
Re:It is summer.... duh (Score:2)
The perfect chance... (Score:3, Funny)
Dry Times (Score:1)
I've only picked up 4 New games in the last few months, and I've actually have started to go out and buy games that I passed on earlier because nothing good has come out. We've been getting alot of crap lately.
Once the holiday season comes around and all the great Titles start coming out things will pick up again. We're just in a bit of a dry spell.
But lets just hope we're not seeing
Money, College, Friends (Score:4, Interesting)
The last console game I bought was Final Fantasy VI (III in the US) for the Super Nintendo.
Now, allow me to make three points:
1. Most "new" games just don't interest me. Sure, they look entertaining, but they're just not worth the money. I'd like to play them, but I have better things on which to spend my money. $40 buys a lot of pizza.
2. I'm in college. If any one of my friends buys a new game or system, I can play it for free pretty-much whenever I want. Between all of my friends, I've got access to everything but X-Box games. One purchase satisfies 20 people, so only one purchase is made, instead of 20.
3. Most newer games, while they may be entertaining, are usually only thus so the first time through. There's no replay-value. Ergo, when we all leave college and lose access to all those games, we have no desire to acquire them on our own.
Also, having lost access to free games, people tend to either give up on gaming altogether (just not worth the money) or stay a step behind the curve, picking them up at steep discounts in the bargain bin.
Zelda 2 was worth the $50 I paid for it back in the day, considering that I -still- play (and greatly enjoy) it from time to time.
[end_rant]
Re:Money, College, Friends (Score:2)
I don't think this is the majority attitude. Could be wrong though.
2. I'm in college. If any one of my friends buys a new game or system, I can play it for free pretty-much whenever I want. Between all of my friends, I've got access to everything but X-Box games. One purchase satisfies 20 people
Re:Money, College, Friends (Score:2)
I sure hope it isn't. But with the economy being the way it is, I'm sure people are re-evaluating where they spend their "entertainment dollar."
This is no different than it's ever been. While I do call bullshit on your 20 to 1 ratio. Secondly, stop being a mooch.
I didn't say it was different, and the 20-1 is just my group
Also, I attend RIT [rit.edu], a co
Re:Money, College, Friends (Score:1)
We've got two NESs, an SNES, an Atari 7800, an N64, a Sega Genesis, an Intellivision II, a Japanese PS1, several PSXs, two PS2s, four Game Cubes, and countless GBAs between us. Not to mention a pile of games for all of them. We don't even need ROMs.
Re:Money, College, Friends (Score:1)
Yes, they probably are - and if they're paying attention, they're realizing one good $30 game is a better entertainment purchase than, say, a family outing to the movie theatre which could cost just as much with popcorn and drinks and ticket prices. Better than a DVD in just about all cases. And so on.
I'd think games would be visible as a more attractive entert
Re:Money, College, Friends (Score:3, Insightful)
Yeah, and like 13,000 calories (400 calories per slice, 8 slices per pie, $10 a pie 400*8*4 = 12,800). Get yourself a $40 dance dance revolution game or even ebay a nintendo power pad. Your arteries will thank you
Re:Money, College, Friends (Score:1)
I love that game ^_^
Re:Money, College, Friends (Score:1)
Record warm weather to blame? (Score:2)
FUD control (Score:3, Interesting)
A nine percent drop is not that big a deal. Really. The reason being that June already is a slow month. The drop is due to several reasons (some I've already posted). The first (and biggest) is that we're right in the middle of a console development cycle, with the already existing consoles having been on the market for several years. Console sales also drive game sales. Secondly, June is right in the middle of crunch time for the AAA game titles. Everyone is holding off on buying games to get the huuuuge blockbuster games of Christmas. Thirdly, the games on the market aren't that good. Enter the Matrix is bad and Lara Croft isn't that great either.
Some people have mentioned the economy. Actually the game industry does better when the economy is bad. (More people buy games looking to escape their troubles.) If you look at past revenue figures, the gaming industry has always thrived during hard times. Just look at the past sales number of the past three years in the US. It's not piracy either. Operation Buccaneer and the recent closure of many pirate groups have put the finger in the dyke so to speak, but piracy is something the industry has lived with for twenty years. There hasn't been any discernable increase in piracy that would affect sales this much, especially when it comes to consoles.
If you really want something to gloom and doom about, I'd seriously pay attention to the SEC probes of gaming companies. That has some serious implications. Fact is come Christmas sales records will be broken and you'll forget that you ever saw this article.
Sort of bogus (Score:1)
It's all about what was released. Last year's June had bigger/better releases than this month.
In general, though, the the trend for game buying is up and doesn't show any sign of stopping.
Bad month for games... (Score:2)
Had those two games lived up to the hype instead of being merely average, I bet overall sales would have been a lot better.
Re:Bad month for games... (Score:1, Troll)
Ultimately, you end up with a large number of people that think "hey, this is what a game is *supposed* to be like," and start a downward spiral of expectations and quality. (Hollywood, anyone?)
--Jeremy
Well, what do you expect when..... (Score:2, Interesting)
When games of that extreme craptitude are best-sellers, well, no wonder sales are down. Where the hell is Zelda and Ikaruga? Why is it the worst games are always the ones that sell the best?
Because the market has been saturated by non-gamers who wouldn't know a good game from a hole in the ground.
Re:Well, what do you expect when..... (Score:1)
Lots of people know about Tomb Raider and The Matrix from the movies, and so will buy the game.
Also, I've only seen Ikaruga in one store near me - it's not even in all the other stores in that chain either. Hardcore shooters haven't been doing well in the gaming market since...well, the SNES really. Casual and non-gamers aren't likely to buy these sorts of titles - esp
Part 2 (Score:2)
Comparing Music to Gaming (Score:1)
What's worth buying? (Score:2)
Everything that sounds even remotely promising has been reviewed as disappointment, so I haven't even bothered. I may pick up Medieval: Total War's Viking supplement if nothing shows up soon.