PSP to Miss EU Launch Date 49
GamesIndustry.biz has the news that just one day after announcing the U.S. launch date for the PSP, the European launch of the PSP may not happen until after the first quarter. From the article: "Speaking with the news service, Sony's Kenichi Fukunaga admitted that the firm cannot manufacture enough of the devices to satisfy demand in all three major markets - which has pushed the schedule for the European launch back."
No suprise (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No suprise (Score:1, Troll)
Read the psp price information area.
400 dollars as a launch price was floated around for a while. Knowing that consoles lose money at launch, i can reasonably deduct that the price of the console is 500 dollars to produce. Now, to give sony credit i will assume that the manufacturing price dropped recently in lieu of their price drop, so roughly 400 dollars.
Sony is not going to say "It costs us xxx to manufacture this product
Re:No suprise (Score:2)
Re:No suprise (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:No suprise (Score:2)
Makes the loss about 150 in that case ; Still quite a hefty ammount.
Re:No suprise (Score:1)
With retail markup ranging from 25-100 % in most cases.
Re:No suprise (Score:2)
The good ol' days, when retailers were selling shit without making a profit ;-)
Gah! (Score:4, Insightful)
Anyone care to explain why Europe tends to be the second-class citizen for practically all tech releases?
*miffed*
Re:Gah! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Gah! (Score:2)
Re:Gah! (Score:2)
This is the reason why the PS2 beats the Xbox in sales by about 13 million (instead of a small margin in the US), because the Xbox is (barely) number 3 in sales in Japan and the Japanese market is huge.
Re:Gah! (Score:1)
Re:Gah! (Score:1)
Re:Gah! (Score:2)
Re:Gah! (Score:2)
It'd help if Europe used NTSC like USA and Japan does. Not saying it'd solve it, but it'd definitely help. (Note: I'm talking about the video game market in general. For obvious reasons, the PSP is exempt.)
Re:Gah! (Score:2)
NTSC was invented to deliberately be at odds with the EU.
There is no way on earth we will change to Never The Same Colour, thank you.
Re:Gah! (Score:2)
-PAL Television system (not in the case of handhelds, but it stablishes a trend)
-The need to translate to several languages, like german, french, italian, spanish in some cases, etc. This also applies to some localizations that may be necessary.
-Wacky regulations. Think of the changes that games need in order to be published in germany. I remember that Acclaim had to change every human to robots to sell Turok there. Same thing with Contra (Probotector in EU). I don'
Imports? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Imports? (Score:1)
Now not to be harsh or anything its like the US is 2nd class and the EU is an after thought. Though I am sure there will be some US units to make it to EU before the launch there.
Re:Imports? (Score:4, Insightful)
Europe not only needs multiple languages in localization but frequently massive cuts need to be made due to anti-violence laws that aren't uniform across Europe as compared to a single set of laws for the US (Contra to Probotector changes, anyone?) and for consoles there's the whole reformatting to PAL issue.. localization for Europe is considerably tougher than for the US. While the PAL thing doesn't count for a handheld, it's the overall "Japan first, US won't take so long, but Europe will be slow going" mindset.
I won't be surprised if the US launch date slips for having difficulty producing enough hardware. Not sure if I'm going to be in line for one or not, but I'll probably wait until the initial warfare dies off and it's easier to get one in the stores if I get one at all-- or possibly even wait for the second revision since I've had *really* bad luck with first rev Sony hardware to date.
Re:Imports? (Score:2)
Hell, Grand Theft Auto and Manhunt are both European games (Scottish, to be precise).
The localisation thing
Re:Imports? (Score:1)
People that really want them will get them. Normal consumers, won't go through the efforts.
Re:Imports? (Score:2)
Price.
Re:Imports? (Score:2)
The legality of importing goods from outside the EU without the authorisation of the brand owner was tested last year with the drawn-out Tesco vs Levi Strauss case, which the clothing manufacturer won. Tesco had imported jeans from a US supplier and therefore bypassed the manufacturer's authorised channel.
Because it dealt directly with a US supplier it managed to keep costs low and sold the jeans at reduced prices, much to the pleasure of Tesco's customers.
But this was an infringement o
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Same old Sony. (Score:2)
Re:Same old Sony. (Score:1)
4) It will be the best selling system on the market
Not Enough Units... (Score:1)
Dont forget also... (Score:1, Funny)
They also don't take baths, brush their teeth, and the women don't shave their pits anyway.
Re:Dont forget also... (Score:3, Funny)
I think Sony is making a big mistake (Score:2)
Maybe they had to localize their games, but I think it was an oppertunity lost. Now the DS will have more than a month head start in 2 of the 3 regions.
At least.. (Score:2)
Personally I plan on going to place my pre-order in the next week. Lost my PS2 when my apartment got broken into and I've wanted to pick up an mp3 player so I'm hoping to kill 2 birds with one stone. Hopefully it won't be killing them with a flying UMD!
Dollar vs. Euro? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Dollar vs. Euro? (Score:3, Interesting)
Theoretically yes. But first there is the arrogance of American companies which seem to think that shipping to Europe is not worth the hassle (e.g. Amazon - we can order books from them though) and then there is customs and VAT.
It's much easier for me to order from an Asian specialist like Lik-Sang, which is what I actually did, after hearing that the European release is delayed.
BTW: Does anyone kn
Wipeout Pure slipped too (Score:1)