Kugetsu wrote:
I doubt that would break them. They can sell a little over half as much as the DS and still make about the same profit. In the first couple few days of sales, rabid fanboys make up a lot of the purchases. Most of them aren't going to care about the extra bit of money they have to spend on it, which isn't a bad deal at all if you add it up. Some of the products included are staples (well, really only the Memory Stick), and some of them... why do they see the need to releases them with it? Also, PSP has a much larger variety games coming out at release, which will seriously boost sales, whether the library is mediocre or not. More games generally means better sales because they appeal to a more broad spectrum of gamers.
You also have to remember the targeted audience that each company is appealing to. While this isn't universally true, the DS is aiming for a younger audience and the PSP is targetting people that have jobs and the money to pay for these kind of things. I am concerned on some of the games that both sides are attempting to produce, in fact, I thought both could do better. Looking at the lineup of both, I just don't see anything (that includes games that haven't been released) that's worth buying either system for.
Yay! I finally made a post that wasn't completely cruel to biaseness (is that a word?).
While it may have a really big launch lineup, a pricepoint of $49.99 a game could really kill it.
And for the whole PSP is aiming for an older audience thing just look at this.
Quote:
Use of the DS among the over-19 "mature" set has also risen from 49 to 59 percent
Taken from
http://www.gamespot.com/news/2005/02/03 ... 17814.html , 3rd paragraph.
One word, PWNED! (Sorry, I have been spending too much time on the gamefaqs boards.)