Tomorrow's Xbox 360 Japanese Launch 31
rAiNsT0rm writes "The BBC has a great story covering the looming Xbox 360 launch in Japan tomorrow." Next Generation is reporting that, while there are no firm numbers yet, the 360 likely sold about 320,000 units in its first week on the retail shelf. From the BBC article: "Pre-orders on the internet look solid, but I don't think the retail stores will sell out of Xbox 360s in the first day ... Serious game fans will likely rush to buy them, but I think most people are going to wait and see."
Launch all they like.. (Score:2)
(still waiting for the UK to get some more..
Re:Launch all they like.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Launch all they like.. (Score:2)
Re:Size of the Xbox 360? (Score:2)
Re:Size of the Xbox 360? (Score:2)
Yeah, but that can be hidden behind stuff, unlike the console itself. Having a separate external power brick seems to be little more than continuation of a trend started by the GameCube and followed up by the slimline PS2. I don't recall IGN showing the transformer for either of those consoles, either.
Re:Size of the Xbox 360? (Score:1)
I wonder... (Score:3, Interesting)
Do retail outlets even DO bundling over there? I don't know.
Re:I wonder... (Score:3, Informative)
Highly doubtful as nobody's expecting a sell-out as it is. With low demand, forced bundling would just reduce sales further. A customer can just walk out of the store and buy somewhere else, which was not really an option here.
Do retail outlets even DO bundling over there? I don't know.
I have never seen stores do it (factory bundles like pack-in games that come in the box are more common th
not interested (Score:1)
Re:not interested (Score:1)
Re:not interested (Score:2)
He says he already got one! (Score:2)
Looks Japaneese gamers might be coming to the same conclusion.
Also, how dumb does a company have to be to under-stock just before Christmas [shamusyoung.com]?
huh? (Score:1, Interesting)
You do realize that the Xbox 360 is the cheapest major console ever to be release, when adjusted for inflation? You are paying less of your disposible income for this than your NES, SNES, Sega, PS1, PS2, Dreamcast, etc.
Re:huh? (Score:2, Interesting)
So the $200 I spent on a Gamecube in 2002 is more than $400 in 2005 dollars.
Right?
Re:huh? (Score:1)
Re:huh? (Score:5, Informative)
$200 in 2002 dollars is $213.49 today, according to the inflation calculator here [westegg.com]. So, no, the GameCube was not more than the base X360 console.
The Dreamcast also cost $199 when it was launched in 1999, and that's only $228 today.
The Xbox 360 core system is not really more expensive than most, but it is hardly the cheapest ever at launch.
Re:huh? (Score:2)
$199 in 1986 dollars ($340.89 today) got you an NES, two control pads, a Zapper, and the venerable Super Mario Bros./Duck Hunt cart. If you wanted the Deluxe set with R.O.B the Video Robot, that finally pushes things over the X360's price tag.
Sure, it's not a Saturn or a PlayStation 2, but...
Re:huh? (Score:1)
From Japan... (Score:5, Informative)
There are ads for the 360 around - mostly in convience stores (Lawson's and 7/11, that I've seen). These are more like general stores in Japan - you can get games at some convience stores, its not considered a real hardcore gaming place. And the ads aren't even that big.
I recently purchased a DS and in actual game stores there is next to nothing about the 360.
On TV I've seen the commercial for Resident Evil 4 for the PS2 a dozen times in the last few days. I've seen exactly one Xbox 260 ad (for Perfect Dark) and that was at 3 a.m. (granted game commercials play mostly at those times, but I saw the Resident Evil/Biiohazard commercials during prime time too).
The DS on the other hand is eating up the game market. It looks to be the next PS2 (and that is still running strong out here).
I read the BBC article right before it was posted to slashdot and I don't think hardcore gamers here will buy the machine. There are zero Japanese interest games for the machine. Without even Dead or Alive, the machine's sunk. There's no interest that I can see here (granted I'm outside Osaka, and not Tokyo, but even considering Denden town, there's no interest).
Re:From Japan... (Score:2)
Yes, but are we surprised? Sony and Nintendo are Japanese companies. Microsoft is an American company, perhaps an iconic American company.
Something tells me that if Nintendo released the XBOX 360 (with a different name) of course, same name, same specs, same launch titles, it would do well in Japan, SIMPLY because of the name Nintendo.
And that, my friends, is when you know that you have
Re:From Japan... (Score:1)
The reason why Sony and Nintendo as brands sell consoles is because they have a history of making good ones. The NES and SNES were killer, and while the N64 did not fare as well as its predecessors one need only peek into the windows of university clubrooms to see groups of people huddled around TVs playing Gol
Re: (Score:2)
Re:From Japan... (Score:2)
You don't have to assume bias there. You could, instead, assume that Japanese people looked at the shitty and miniscule game lineup, with a new game coming out every month or so (it seemed), and realize that the product wasn't worth buying.
If you want to accuse Japanese developers of not ju
Re:From Japan... (Score:1)
Re:From Japan... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Money making opportunity. (Score:3, Funny)