Leapfrog Launches GBA-Style Educational Handheld 28
Thanks to Yahoo/Reuters for their story on the launch of Leapfrog's educational handheld, the Leapster. The article says the handheld is "aimed at giving parents an alternative to Nintendo's GameBoy system, [and] plays educational games and interactive videos." It retails for $79, with game cartridges costing around $25, and a Leapfrog spokesman commented on the reasoning behind today's launch: "A half a million GameBoys were sold last year for kids in the 3-1/2 to 6-1/2-year-old age group, but try to get parents to admit that in a focus group. This is a completely untapped market."
I know this is stupid... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I know this is stupid... (Score:1, Funny)
If it was on the front page, you would have gotten an extra zero. Oh well.
Re:I know this is stupid... (Score:2)
And pay Nintendo how much in licensing fees per cart? And how much per dev station?
Not to mention having the titles stocked in the same shelf as Super Mario Brothers, where parents may never see them or understand what they are?
Re:I know this is stupid... (Score:4, Insightful)
You think either of those is going to be more expensive than R&D + parts to build systems?
I agree with you that the games will be a tough sell, but the other arguments are ridiculous.
Re:I know this is stupid... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:I know this is stupid... (Score:2)
I think this is likely the real reason. It's not like Leapfrog isn't already making plenty of their own custom hardware, what's one more product? Plus they already have dedicated shelfspace in many (most?) toy stores. It just wouldn't make sense for them to let themselves get lost among all the other Game Boy games.
MOD PARENT DOWN (Score:2, Interesting)
EDUCATE YOURSELF: How do you know that they are not making a profit on the hardware? Do you even know what is inside one of these things? The widespread myth that all consoles are sold at a loss (and apparently you've extended this belief to the handheld market as well) is
hackability (Score:3, Interesting)
I give it a week... (Score:2)
How to make sure a product fails (Score:2)
Prefix instead (Score:2)
Re:How to make sure a product fails (Score:1)
Yes, because the target demographic of 3.5 to 6.5 year olds is in extreme need of things that make them feel like badasses, it drives their lives forward like nothing else.
Re:How to make sure a product fails (Score:2)
btw I thought your statement was quite funny.
Don't worry kids (Score:1)
Good old-fashioned cops and robbers for all of you this year! Yay! And you get to choose whether you want to be the good guy cop or the bad (fun!) guy robber!
Now come sit on Santa's lap!
My Grandmother's Coming Out With A Handheld! (Score:2)
So, I hear that you can pick up a new handheld console in Corn Pops all this month.
What about Jimmy? (Score:2, Redundant)
By making their own handheld, all they are going to do is make life miserable for the poor kid who's parents buys him/her one of the leapfrogs while all his friends get the GBA's. "Ha ha Jimmy got the baby game boy" Please! lets think of Jimmy here!
In a world where everything(tm) is edutainment... (Score:1)
The Leapfrog solution seems to a shortcut with questionable intent. It seems like a parent would give this to their child and say, "Here, I bought you this, now go learn something with it," instead of teaching them using real-
You guys are missing the point... (Score:4, Insightful)
My 16 month old son LOVES Leapfrog toys. They keep his attention far longer than any of the other toys he has. They are also educational, brightly colored, and fun looking. GBA's are small, have tiny buttons, are boring to look at from a toddler's point of view, have many opening to stick crumbs and other things into, and the clamshell design on the new ones would almost immedeately get torn in half.
Looking at it from the perspective of a parent, I think my son would love one of these. When he's a teenager, he'll want something more advanced, but for now this would be great for him. I think Leapfrog knows what they're doing here.
Re:You guys are missing the point... (Score:1)
They enjoy playing Final Fanstany games after I've gotten to a point where the characters are near invicible.
They also loved Kingd
Re:You guys are missing the point... (Score:2)
Actually, Leapfrog says their target market is 4 to 8, not 16 months. With a touch-sensitive screen and an attached pen, the Leapster is likely MORE fragile than the GBA. The GBA, by comparison, has a double-hulled screen and a solid-state design, whose durability should be legendary by now. The GBA is more durable than the old Tiger Electronics LCD games sold towards kids, and i
Re:You guys are missing the point... (Score:1)
If I had a kid about to enter kindergarten I would certainly buy one for him or her... And wouldn't buy them a GBA until they were in the 3rd grade or higher (if ever).
If I recall correctly, kindergarten to 3rd grade is about the same as ages 4 to 8. So what exactly is your gripe?
Oooh, i can see it now (Score:1)
Poor bastards.
Sell more than N-Gage? (Score:1)
Anyone else tired of 'ster's? (Score:2)