As the Consumer Electronics Show kicked off Wednesday, Sony sent out a press release that attempted to set the tone of the console debate. Apparently this year's tone will be "crazy ex-girlfriend."
With PlayStation 3 being the only one of the three consoles to see its sales drop this November versus the same month in 2007, and a $200 entry-level Xbox 360 attracting price-conscious shoppers, Sony is gearing up to take a beating in December, January, and beyond. So out comes the spin. First, a Sony exec tells CNET that PlayStation 3 sales were up 130% following Black Friday, which is somehow supposed to be a sign of health even though sales of every product on Earth jump after Black Friday.
And then, this letter:
In other words:* what does she have that I don't?!*
What is immediately obvious here -- besides the fact that the writer of this release has a deeply ingrained misunderstanding of the possessive form (year's, Jones') -- is a feeling like Sony has finally been reduced to grasping at straws. We needn't even delve too deeply into the half-truths (there are cheaper hard drive solutions for Arcade buyers; HDMI was available in every Xbox on shelves this holiday). But is this really the whole message?
Yes -- you get more machine for your $400 with PlayStation 3. But since when has anything but price and killer app games ever decided a console war?
This holiday season and its aftermath may very well prove that Microsoft was right after all to take the hard drive out of the Xbox 360 and put a bare-bones SKU on shelves. Yes: I thought it was a phenomenally stupid idea at the time. Remember "tard pack," the perjorative nickname for the Core SKU that ended up making the New York Post? A $200 game console doesn't sound so retarded in a recession.
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