It's all very, very early, but I'm inclined to agree.duk said:Ask me a few months ago and I would have said in 2010 the market would look like this:
PS3 - 40 %
360 - 35%
Wii - 25%
Now in the directions Sony and Nintendo are headed?
PS3 - 30%
360 - 35%
Wii - 35%
GhaleonEB said:It's all very, very early, but I'm inclined to agree.
GhaleonEB said:It's all very, very early, but I'm inclined to agree.
duk said:Ask me a few months ago and I would have said in 2010 the market would look like this:
PS3 - 40 %
360 - 35%
Wii - 25%
Now in the directions Sony and Nintendo are headed?
PS3 - 20%
360 - 25%
Wii - 55%
jarrod said:About the only place I could a potnetial need for the core is in developing markets like Inida, China and Brazil. And then probably as the only SKU option... but in the USA? It's entirely unnecessary considering where the industry stands today.
duk said:Ask me a few months ago and I would have said in 2010 the market would look like this:
PS3 - 40 %
360 - 35%
Wii - 25%
Now in the directions Sony and Nintendo are headed?
PS3 - 30%
360 - 35%
Wii - 35%
mrklaw said:also keep in mind that regardless of their longterm goals, if the shareholders don't start seeing some more positive results they will want action.
Just because they have shitloads of money doesn't mean they can just play with it with no responsibilities
urk said:Honest question: Do they tally replacement units in the number calculations? For instance, my friend bought a launch 360 and returned it after it kept freezing up. When Gears dropped he bought another one. Of course, he doesn't own two, but do they tally it up as two sales?
Agreed, but we're looking both at initial results, short-term forecasts and strategy, including price and demographic positioning.Il Comodino said:you can't use the 1th 3 week to look a market of 5/6 years
urk said:Honest question: Do they tally replacement units in the number calculations? For instance, my friend bought a launch 360 and returned it after it kept freezing up. When Gears dropped he bought another one. Of course, he doesn't own two, but do they tally it up as two sales?
Maximilian E. said:So they came off far cheaper by doing it themselves than by buying Nintendo...
urk said:No they didn't. Nintendo is profitable.
Yes, and they're all raking in a tidy profit while doing so... something the core currently doesn't manage and likely wouldn't at $199 for another year at the very least.Arsenal said:You mean the industry where the low cost GBA, DSL, PS2 and Wii are cleaning house?
See you in 2008 then...Arsenal said:The core has had slow sales so far because of its pricepoint - once it goes under $200, it will become much more appealing as an entry level system with simple upgrades to add functionality at a later point in time.
And they'd still get a return faster than they will on RARE, at this pace.Maximilian E. said:But MS would still had to spend 15 billion.. it would take years to get the investment back..
jarrod said:See you in 2008 then...
No pricedrop until end of 2007 then?Klocker said:exactly.... that is what the Core is made for and why it will never go away.
jarrod said:No pricedrop until end of 2007 then?
You seem unwilling to acknowledge though that Microsoft can still be perfectly competitive with a SKU reshuffle, get the same percieved and competitive effect of a pricedrop, and have the added benefit of actually start making a return on hardware. Sony opened the window for them, you really expect them to go back to (heavy losses) plan A? Just stay the course?Arsenal said:You seem fixated on the fact that MS might loose money on the hardware when that is pretty much a given. Take the price of a Core bundle in Japan for instance. While it is pretty stupid to leave money on th table with unnecessary price cuts, MS is going to do what it needs to do to remain competitive in the market.
You seem unwilling to acknowledge though that Microsoft can still be perfectly competitive with a SKU reshuffle, get the same percieved and competitive effect of a pricedrop, and have the added benefit of actually start making a return on hardware. Sony opened the window for them, you really expect them to go back to (heavy losses) plan A? Just stay the course?
Sean*O said:I think MS might want to, just maybe, entertain the idea of hitting the gas now and completely burying Sony under the weight of the current climate.
It would also be wise for them to price the Core 360 evenly with the Wii where it would have an overwhelming advantage from a hardware power perspective, and also from a games library perspective at this point.
No one can absorb a loss like MS, and if they cement the #1 position this generation, they will make all of their losses back, and then some.
Odysseus said:I'm fairly certain this generation will have come and gone and the Core will never have been relevant. I don't think it will appeal to people ever. Even my uncle who was shopping for a system to have at his house so his grandkids could play it when they came over, someone who hasn't owned a game system probably since Intellivision, even he was aware of how retarded the tard pack actually was and ended up buying a premium.
Odysseus said:I'm fairly certain this generation will have come and gone and the Core will never have been relevant. I don't think it will appeal to people ever. Even my uncle who was shopping for a system to have at his house so his grandkids could play it when they came over, someone who hasn't owned a game system probably since Intellivision, even he was aware of how retarded the tard pack actually was and ended up buying a premium.
Odysseus said:I'm fairly certain this generation will have come and gone and the Core will never have been relevant. I don't think it will appeal to people ever. Even my uncle who was shopping for a system to have at his house so his grandkids could play it when they came over, someone who hasn't owned a game system probably since Intellivision, even he was aware of how retarded the tard pack actually was and ended up buying a premium.
Maximilian E. said:I have experienced the contrary..
A friend of mine is going to buy a core pack to her sisters son, and his mother is going to buy the hdd and some uncle some games etc..
But in the long run, the core pack will make "sense" even for hardcore gamers (at least, they will see that it makes sense).
When there are several hdds to choose from, more memory cards etc.. and when the core pack goes down in price.. then it will all make sense..
jarrod said:No pricedrop until end of 2007 then?
Maximilian E. said:When there are several hdds to choose from, more memory cards etc.. and when the core pack goes down in price.. then it will all make sense..
Sean*O said:I think MS might want to, just maybe, entertain the idea of hitting the gas now and completely burying Sony under the weight of the current climate.
It would also be wise for them to price the Core 360 evenly with the Wii where it would have an overwhelming advantage from a hardware power perspective, and also from a games library perspective at this point.
No one can absorb a loss like MS, and if they cement the #1 position this generation, they will make all of their losses back, and then some.
It's a possible scenraio, though it misses the spring window to bleed the competition post-launch. PS2 handled this perfectly, I wouldn't expect Microsoft to just pass up a golden opportunity to return the favor...Klocker said:I'm thinking price drop near the end of 2007 with the impact (and original intention of the Core's existence) being realized in 2008.
KeithFranklin said:I have always thought the Core really wont sell much at all except for this time of year.
It is much more palatable as a gift and the gift giver doesnt care that the recipient needs a memory card to save a game. How many PS2's and GCN's were sold for Christmas presents without memory cards? When people are purchasing for themselves then the core isnt a wise choice, but as a gift it works.
jarrod said:It's a possible scenraio, though it misses the spring window to bleed the competition post-launch. PS2 handled this perfectly, I wouldn't expect Microsoft to just pass up a golden opportunity to return the favor...
Dr_Cogent said:Core was perfect for me when I refused to be without a system while my other one was out for repair.
Slapped on my old hard drive onto it and whammo. Back in biz.
Odysseus said:How much did you get for it when you traded it in once your other system came back?
Odysseus said:How much did you get for it when you traded it in once your other system came back?
Additionally, Microsoft was helped out by weaker than expected sales of both the Wii and PS3 during the same period, indicating that shoppers looking for a next-gen console may have been opting for Microsoft's entrant over others due to availability.
While the most recent data shows six million Xbox 360 consoles sold as of September 30, internal data indicates Microsoft may have sold more than eight million units as of the end of November.
Reaching the 10 million goal is just now a matter of sales: about a week ago the company shipped its ten millionth console. And from the looks of things, hitting the mark may not be that difficult.
Wow.duk said:
Anyone heard of this site?Numbers obtained by BetaNews seem to back up Moore's claim. Sources say the company sold as many as 100,000 consoles per day in the period surrounding Thanksgiving weekend. Numbers were on the high end of expectations, according to the data.
Arsenal said:The 360 was built from the ground up to support an external, upgradable and optional HDD. A big reason why the core is not selling very well is because MS is charging an arm and a leg for mem cards and HDD accessories, not to mention the existing options there are extremely limited. Its hard to say what MS has planned, but it just doesn't make sense to me that they would *not* offer a 360 without a HDD based on its design. If they were to start licensing HDDs to 3rd parties or something like that - the core could start looking like a much better deal from an upgrade perspective. Hopefully the PS3 and its more open accessory architecture will kind of force this on MS. I have long thought that the 360s best bet to compete against Bluray is simply to offer gigantic HDDs that will make downloads easier to manage.
Edit: I also have to say that I am very surprised that there is not a bigger black market for non-MS 360 HDDs, I would think that kind of hack would be pretty easy (but I don't really know much about that kind of thing).
Dr_Cogent said:I didn't trade it in. My premium (without the HD) is now attached to my SDTV in the family room. It doubles as a DVD player and my wife and kid sometimes play Viva. I just use my memory card for them.
My core is now where the premium was before with the original HD attached. I have a 1 year warranty on this new core. I never had any intention on taking it back. I just figured I would own 2 Xbox 360s. My wife was even the one who suggested it. I didn't even think of buying another system. I figured I would just have to suffer it out.
Data is released in just over an hour; probably less than two hours until it hits GAF.JB1981 said:100,000 consoles per day?
It'd be cool if true. I guess we'll get a better idea by tonight, no?
duk said: