If we' re only talking in terms of Sony vs Microsoft, next year is when the outcome will ultimately be decided. For 2006 and 2007, Microsoft ended up with many 3rd party games " exclusive" by default, purely because 360 hit the market a year earlier than the competition. When you take that into account, PS3 isn' t actually doing all that badly.
Also, we' ve only really seen a handful of games from notable Japanese studios. Games like Tekken, Soul Calibur, Final Fantasy, Gran Turismo, Metal Gear Solid, Devil May Cry, Resident Evil, Team ICO' s games etc... were all big players last gen for Sony. They' re the games that defined the console. Now, Capcoms games have gone multiplatform and Soul Calibur will be on 360, but Metal Gear, Final Fantasy, Gran Turismo and their ilk won' t.
I think Sony' s lineup for next year is
far stronger than Microsoft' s, and as long as their 3rd party games are on par, i can' t see them coming off anywhere near as badly as they have this year.
I think the main thing Sony need to do is move hardware in Japan. 360' s dead in the water so their only competition is Wii and i think that once games like GT5, Metal Gear 4 and Tekken 6 are released we' ll see some serious movement there. It' s a huge market too so even if they performed worse than Microsoft in Europe, Japan could make up for it.
It' ll be interesting to see how everybody does in December. PS3 did 466,000 in the US in November which isn' t brilliant, but isn' t damning either. Sony will probably do a mil worldwide for the month which given the circumstances is pretty respectable. It' ll be higher in December and they' ll probably have a good January too, so March - May (Spring) will be really important and Sony will be pushing to get games out.
Microsoft have done a lot of things right, but their exclusive software isn' t really pushing hardware sales like it should be. BioShock, Halo 3 and Mass Effect were arguably their biggest releases of the year and yet Wii has still trounced them lending credence to the increasingly commonly held belief that the ' Halo' consumer already owned the console. Microsoft have chiseled their corner of the market and are now going to struggle to expand on it. The industry isn' t fuelled by sci-fi shooters featuring bald space-marines. If it was, 360 would kill everything... ever.
I don' t even see 3rd party game sales on PS3 being an issue. By this time next year the picture will look very different and i fully expect most PS3 versions to be selling comparably to the 360 versions. I think the current install base is hindering software perforance and when that increases, so will the sales figures. Though i do think it will take
another price cut for that to happen.
< Message edited by nitro -- 16 Dec 07 23:31:11 >