UMD Sales Picking Up Steam 78
After what some deemed a slow start, Sony is now claiming that they've sold slightly more than 17 Million UMDs since the launch of the PSP. 9 Million of these discs have been games, with just over 8 Million UMD movies. From the article: "Current manufacturing lines are stretched to the max - Bob Hurley, with Sony DADC, says that Sony is churning out 200,000 UMDs a day and future capacity is expected to be 500,000 per day. 'Tiger Woods Golf is my personal favorite [game], but video has been surprisingly good to us,' says Hurley. In a few years Sony expect videos to be more than 60 percent of all UMD sales, with an expected 130 million UMDs being sold in 2008."
huh? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:huh? (Score:1)
Sales by territory? (Score:3, Interesting)
Considering no one I know has been the least bit interested in movies, despite enjoying the PSP, I'm honestly surprised with those figures...
Re:Sales by territory? (Score:2, Insightful)
The reason so many vids have sold is that people who shelled out $$ need something to justify all that $$ they shelled out for something that has only retread games - so they buy a video.
And yeah, I know what I have in my sig, but I already got the Xbox and Ipod free, so why not.
I guess there's simply no limit (Score:5, Insightful)
movies I can't play anywhere other than on my tiny PSP screen, for more than a DVD? SIGN ME UP!
Seriously, I doubt UMDs will account for 60%, as the novelty of this format will soon wear off. (one can hope, anyway...)
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:2)
wildly optimistic. or they're going to bring out some porno umd's.
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:2)
Actually I heard that they are, although I don't have a link.
Already got porn, thank you very much (Score:2, Informative)
wildly optimistic. or they're going to bring out some porno umd's.
Already got those [tokyopia.com], arigatou gozaimasu.
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:2)
and you can watch movies on the tiny screen by encoding them yourself as well
Can you, really? My wife won a PSP from one of those McDonald's peel-off stickers... maybe we'll have a use for it after all. I'll have to figure out how to gin up a transcode scripts to convert the movies on my movie jukebox to the right format... that would be quite cool, actually, to be able to copy a selection of movies onto PSP memory sticks to take along on a trip.
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:1)
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:2)
Does it run on Linux? If not, I guess I have a couple of Solaris boxes around... And do I have to buy it?
:-)
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:1)
There is video everywhere now. In your car. In the bar. In your house. With a mouse. In all waiting rooms. In the classroom. There's even videos playing when I stand in line at the convenience store.
Paying that kind of money for something that you will probably watch, at the most, a few times on a tiny screen is absolutely insane.
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:4, Insightful)
Parents looking to keep their kids quiet. Give the kid a new movie and let him wander off, watch it, and shut up.
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:1)
Screw that. What a waste of $250.
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:3, Funny)
Any parent who lets their kids even touch a PSP shouldnt own one or the other.
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:1)
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:3, Funny)
I know, you know what's weird though? I was once in a convenience store and the show that was playing was about someone, who looked a lot like me, shopping at a convenience store. Must have been from the 50s or 60s because it was black and white. It was quite the coincidence though.
Re:I guess there's simply no limit (Score:1)
The local Wal-Mart carries UMD movies for $14.95 to $21.95, with the majority being in the low end - prices comparable or even lower than the cost of the same DVD.
All it takes to invalidate an arguement is one proof that it doesn't work - youjust got invalidated...
no surprize (Score:5, Funny)
Re:no surprize (Score:1)
Now that's optimism for you... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Now that's optimism for you... (Score:2)
Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:2, Offtopic)
Simply put, it looks phenomenal. I know the initial sales in the US weren't quite what were expected, but at 1PM today, I couldn't find a single shop in the Victoria-area that still had stock to sell. I went into Dixons, HMV, Game and Virgin and all of them had sold out. I heard the
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:2)
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:1)
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:1)
The speaker playback volume of movies is very low(although I think you can increase this in a special menu) and headphones are needed which is probably a blessing for commuters.
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:2)
I found Mario 64 DS playable with the thumbpad in a car but even if the touchscreen wasn't usable in a car/train I would still use my DS to play my GBA games as I prefer the screen (I think it's the same but backlit instead of frontlit). I just keep my SP around for GBC and GB games.
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:2)
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:3, Informative)
Seriously, why does slashdot tolerate so much FUD regarding the PSP? Is it seriously so threatening to have a decent competitor to Nintendo on the handheld market?
My daily round-trip commute, until fairly recently, was just over 3 hours. When the trains were broken, which in this country is a pretty regular occurence, I could spend up to 5, even 6 hours a day on the train. Not once, in all this time, did I get so much as a low battery warning from my PSP, whether I'd been watching stuff from the memor
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:2)
Well, here in Japan on my regular 1 hour commute on three different trains, I see almost no PSPs, or even DSs or GBs for that matter. I've seen one person watching video on it, and one using it as a music player, and just a handful of players. I see much, much more people (at least one per day) playing games on their mobiles. Of course, all this gaming is insignificant compared to the emailers,
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:5, Insightful)
I wouldn't put it past them.
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:1, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:2, Interesting)
Where up until yesterday there was a shelf full of plastic boxes representing preorder-PSPs, there were a line of GranTourismo-PStwo bundles, and above literally hundreds of UMDs.
The only systems I saw were 4 boxes lodged between the PS2s and another huge pile of UMDs.
I'll check out the situation again maybe tomorrow, but if Sony give main retailers, like maybe ten PSPs it's no wonder they're sold out.
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:2)
Interestingly, the Game in Victoria station has now ceased selling Gamecube titles (except for a few in the second-hand trays) as they needed the shelf-space for PSP titles. Will be interesting to see if that policy is here to stay and if it's extended to bigger branches (the outlet
Re:Slightly off-topic, but still relevant (Score:2)
I hope the fucking asshole nintendo fanboy that modded you down and me up comes back here and reads this to learn that the guy he modded up is a PSP owner and thinks the DS sucks, even though I made a negative comment about Sony. (Yes, I can admit to plusses and minuses in a device I paid a lot of money f
American pride (Score:2, Insightful)
I personally think we should outlaw... (Score:2, Funny)
Is that including the bundled UMD? (Score:2, Insightful)
How many of those were the bundled Spiderman 2?
Now do those figures mean consumers ahve purchased 9 million or that retailers have purchased 9 million and they are just sitting on their shelves? Sales figures like that have always confused me as it is hard to see how they could quickly & easily track actual consumer sales.
Re:Is that including the bundled UMD? (Score:2)
I think all major retail stores have fairly tight integration between their customer sales and suppliers for next-day shipping services.
Barcode is scanned on the way out and an order will be placed a few hours later if the computer determines the number of items on the shelf is low.
Incidentally, this makes shoplifting fun. If the computer doesn't know the item is missing from
Re:Is that including the bundled UMD? (Score:1)
The real question is.... (Score:3, Interesting)
The whole things smells of how to lie with statistics.
Why buy them (Score:4, Insightful)
Now, if they sold DVD & UMD combo packs for like $3-$5CDN above the DVD only price, they might hook me in. But even then, the prices on portable DVD players are comming down so fast why bother? I've already got 100+ DVDs, buying one of those (while adding bulk to my tech bag) would make more sense.
What else is there to do? (Score:2, Troll)
With the horrible shortage of anything decent to play on the PSP except decade old roms, UMD's are about the only way to feel like you got any value from your purchase and even then it is pretty damn questionable.
Double cross (Score:3, Informative)
But wait, what's this? By selling UMDs they switched markets! PSP vs. video iPod, stay tuned.
video iPod vs. PSP = clear winner (possibly) (Score:2)
Hell, they already sell a cable for it [apple.com]. It would allow you to connect to any external video/audio source to play the content. Not to mention that, if you purchased video clips or movies through the iTunes store, you would most likely be able to play the content on the computer as well (iTunes already has video playing capabilities).
I think that if Apple does a video iP
wow... (AKA "Can you tell I don't own an iPod?") (Score:2)
Obviously then, the iPod video would have a clear advantage straight out of the gate.
Re:Double cross (Score:3, Interesting)
Not really. It's more like Sony announced a next-gen handheld, and Nintendo tried to counter with the DS. Sony specifically doesn't consider the DS a competitor: nor should they. The GBA, perhaps, but more as a "reigning handheld champion vs the next generation" rather than on features.
This is laughable, and insulting to Nintendo. They will forever dominate this generation bas
Re:Double cross (Score:3, Insightful)
First, Nintendogs and Advance Wars are great games. Do not discard them because they aren't targetted to you. I don't understand it, but my niece and all of her friends want Nintendogs this year. And Advance Wars... My cousin has loved the series since inception. Just because the game isn't oGMo friendly, doesn't mean they're lousy games. People buy them because they want them.
Comparing Twisted Metal and Wipeout to Mario Kart isn't even fair. I love all three,
Re:Double cross (Score:2)
I am not; but they are not big system sellers; certainly they are not opponent killers. I know a kid who regularly plays my GBA for hours on end, and has done so for a number of years, but has only ever played Advance Wars.
Re:Double cross (Score:1)
Nintendo makes plenty of games for their systems. The problem is that nobody else does.
Re:Double cross (Score:2)
I agreed with a lot of what you said, but that statement there just cost you a lot of credibility wit
Re:Double cross (Score:1)
Nintendogs, though, sparks little interest on my part, and I doubt other people in my demographic will be too interested either.
For the record, I fit the stereotypical
Re:Double cross (Score:2)
I now have a pinscher that answers to the name "Pothead", and performs suitable actions upon hearing the commands "pass the bong", "chug chug chug, or (my favorite) "want some dope?".
Re:Double cross (Score:2)
5 weeks in a row:
Trace Memory
Lost in Blue
Castlevania
Trauma Center
Phoenix Wright
Where on earth are you getting your information? DS also has Sonic Rush, Viewtiful Joe, Animal Crossing (online), Mario Kart (on
So when does the function of this device change? (Score:1)
UMDs stink, people buy them. (Score:3, Interesting)
Who are we? I'm 22, most of us are adults. We often have laptops, or portable DVD players to watch movies on. We buy our own things.
Who is buying the PSP movies? I think the answer is obvious: not us. So who is doing it? Moms! There are lots of kids out there with PSPs (despite Sony targeting it as the Adult handheld). Buying UMD movies makes some sense. You can get something that you kid will watch in the car on the way to/from school, sitting at the doctor's office, etc. It runs on something they already have so you don't have to buy (and they don't have to carry around) a portable DVD player. Most cars don't have DVD players. And most kids don't have laptops to play DVDs on. For a kid, it does make some sense.
I think this is where all the movie sales are going. I don't think I've ever seen an adult interested in them, but I've seen many kids at stores looking at those movies. I can see why they'd want it (I would have when I was 10 if I liked more movies they sold).
I'd like to see the sales broken down by age range of the person the movie was bought for. THAT would be the interesting information (although sales by territory as another commenter suggested would be interesting too).
PSP not a gaming device? (Score:1)
When almost 50% of software sales for a GAME system are MOVIES, isn't something wrong?
People always talk about the Nintendo DS as a gimmick handheld. But I'm starting to think the PSP is actually the gimmick here. Be honest, would you even think about buying a $250 PSP if all it did was play movies that cost just as much or sometimes more than DVDs on a screen the fraction of the size of a TV? Basically, the idea that it's actually a "gaming" device i
Re:PSP not a gaming device? (Score:1)
You're logic is even more interesting.
A small screen for movies, almost no memory for music, and an extreme lack of quality games. That's "Perfect"? Right...
And I carry my laptop, iPod, and DS everywhere I go, and each of those devices do each of it things "perfectly", IMO. The iPod and DS fit in your pocket fairly easy. As for the portable DVD player or laptop, well if your going to be sitting somewhere for hours watching a movie, bringing something like that
Jeez (Score:1)
Having bought both a DS and a PSP on their respective launch dates (making me a "fanboy" of both), as well as being a mass-transit commuter, I will say that the PSP gets considerably more time than the DS.
Quite frankly, the DS launch library sucked. There was Mario 64 and that was about it. Maybe Feel The Magic. Now, with Meteos out as well as Advance Wars, the library has picked up. But until very recently, it started to
Re:Jeez (Score:1)
Re:Jeez (Score:1)
That said, once you find a non-defective unit and you drop enough cash into it, the PSP does really outshine the DS.
You just underline the problem I have with the PSP. I bought a DS for 200 CND$, with a game and all taxes include. All games cost about 10$ less and the battery last a good 10-12 hours. I can close the lid in a hurry, the game will pause itself and the unit will fall into a low power mode, while protecting my screens at the same time. That's what I call a HANDHELD device.
The PSP, whil
Re:Jeez (Score:1)
If bang-for-buck was the aim, then I would recommend the GBA-SP. That thing simply rocks (mine's been relagated to my 6-year-old).
UMD will fail just like MD (MiniDisc)... (Score:1, Insightful)