PSP Slim Debuts To Big Sales in Japan 38
The PSP Slim debuted in Japan on the 20th to some 250,000 unit sales. The unit also got a significant bump with the release of Final Fantasy: Crisis Core pack. Gamespot reports: "The PSP Slim has now sold a total of 326,645 units in Japan, as of September 23, 75,943 of which coming from the Crisis Core bundle. The handheld was first unveiled during this year's E3 Media and Business Summit. According to SCEA president Kaz Hirai, the new device is 33 percent lighter and 19 percent slimmer, and it also packs a more efficient battery, is faster at loading games, and features video-out capabilities. According to Enterbrain's tally, the combined total of the PSP's new and old model currently sits at 6,217,664 units since the original first went on sale for the island nation in December 2004. "
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Ummm...no (Score:5, Informative)
Fat PSP vs. Fairly-chunky PSP (Score:3, Funny)
Try looking at the side-by-sides [kotaku.com] with the PSP, Slim, DS, and DS Lite before you try and make a joke. Slightly smaller than the PSP, but definitely thinner than the DS Lite.
When you say side by side you ain't kidding... All you can see in those shots are the side of the machine. :)
I don't care if it's thinner - it's too frikkin' big. Making something that big a fraction of an inch thinner doesn't amount to much when it comes to storing the thing. We're talking about the smallest dimension of the machine, and they made it a little smaller. Talk to me when the thing isn't so frikkin' wide...
But mostly I'm just pushing your buttons (except the square button - I hear that one
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They did fix the square button, I hear.
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Re:Fat PSP vs. big-boned PSP (Score:1)
I've owned the PSP for a while and never had a problem sliding it into my jeans pocket. Besides, I'm willing to let it be longer so that I can have the widescreen, which is great for movies and games alike.
Oh, no question, it's got a great screen. All 130555 +- 5 pixels worth. Having a large device is the price you pay, I guess. It's neat that the new version of the PSP is almost every bit as large as the old one.
And the square button is a bit funky on the old PSP but I heard they changed it around for the Slim.
My crack about the square button was just a joke. I remember people complaining about it when the PSP came out, but I don't honestly know if that was just belly-aching or what.
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Sometimes yes but not always, many games use the top screen as the game view and the bottom screen as a control panel. For some it acts like a mousepad with buttons, for others it can be e.g. the control panel of a mech or an excerpt from your spellbook.
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All this, and yet... (Score:2, Insightful)
[1](NES/SNES/SMS ROMS of games I own, for the legally concerned.)
but where are the mines? (Score:1)
I still get more mileage out of my PSP playing homebrew and old ROMS[1] than any official PSP releases. (Although Lumines is great.)
Great for the gameplay [pineight.com], or great for modding 3.50 firmware PSPs?
[1](NES/SNES/SMS ROMS of games I own, for the legally concerned.)
What kind of copier did you use to dump them from your cartridges? (UMG v. MP3.com [wikipedia.org])
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Great for the gameplay, or great for modding 3.50 firmware PSPs?
Great for the gameplay. I own both Lumines games for the PSP. I also have a GBA (and a DS, and a GBA-Micro and...) though I have not pursued the necessaries to play homebrew/ROMs on it.
;) Since I purchased the PSP well in advance of the game being released, I wanted something to do with it. And I disco
Honestly, I purchased the PSP to play the upcoming Castlevania release. (I'm a fan of the series. Sue me.
What you can't do with a PSP pointing stick (Score:1)
Great for the gameplay. I own both Lumines games for the PSP.
Lumines I can understand. But Disney's Lumines II? Do you listen to Sonny and Cher? ([1] [wikipedia.org] [2] [wikipedia.org] [3] [wikipedia.org])
I also have a GBA (and a DS, and a GBA-Micro and...) though I have not pursued the necessaries to play homebrew/ROMs on it.
You should; you'll like DS homebrew. There's a lot you can do with a touch screen that you can't do with a pointing stick [wikipedia.org]. For example, all these were drawn on a DS [brombra.net].
I used the internet to find ROMS of the carts I own. As for UMG v. MP3.com, IANAL, but it appears to me that the court ruled that MP3.com didn't have distribution rights
Then neither do the ROM sites, as they don't even try to verify that the downloader owns or possesses the cartridge. But I asked about cart dumpers not only for the legal reasons but also because I want to try my hand at developing homebrew for so
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But Disney's Lumines II?
You're thinking of Meteos. [wikipedia.org] I'm talking about Lumines. [wikipedia.org]
...you'll like DS homebrew
I believe you, as I said, I just haven't taken the time to pursue it. The PSP is the first system I've really pursued homebrew on, purely because that was where the most interesting things were happening on the system. The DS has had enough good titles to keep me happy, so I haven't really looked elsewhere to get fulfillment from my entertainment dollars. (That said, though, the pics on that site were awesome.)
bvg is Disney (Score:3, Informative)
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64MB memory. (Score:1)
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One thing
Oh lawd (Score:1)
Snide comments beget more (Score:3, Funny)
Oh wait...
Maybe how the DS was already being submerged under PSP sales!
Hmmm...
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Fucking morons.
Not small enough? (Score:2)
Me personally, I'm waiting for the PSP Ocular w/ embedded rootkit!
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Except Eminem appears to have given up his slim name. Rumors are that the ending of "Encore/Curtains Down" [wikipedia.org] represents Eminem killing off the Slim Shady character.
But we have come a long way from the "bigger is better" attitude of the Atari Lynx designers.
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Sony had very clear motives on this one, they want to stop homebrew and custom firmwares.
By releasing the slim it gives people an incentive to buy it (new features),
it also forces (in a nice way) retailers to sell off their old PSP fat stocks.
And its worked pretty good in some areas, the new PSP has made it harder to run homebrew (by blocking the 1.5 Firmware) its also reminded the market that the PSP is out there.
On the down side for Sony the custom firmware runs happily allowing backups to be played
My PSP saved me from buying an iPhone (Score:2, Interesting)
So now that Apple is trying to force the same mess down it's customers' throats with the rolling incompatible iBrick updates, I'm pleased to have learned the lesson of the PSP: don't waste your money. It's just not worth the trouble.
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I honestly thought Sony would wake up to the demand for an unlocked PSP and/or at least public dev tools. No way.
Then, with respect, you were naive.
/. mistake of forgetting that your views were probably only representative of a niche user-base versus the mass market
I'm sure Sony were always aware that there was a certain market segment who'd be more likely to buy a PSP if it weren't locked down. And I'm also sure that they balanced this against their dream of being able to wring extra money from the (far larger number of) ordinary users for every little bit of content and extra functionality.
You made the common
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Noobz (Score:1)