We're facing a recession. I don't care how powerful it is, nobody is buying a 500 dollar console and Sony knows it. They tried this before with the PS3 and it cost them a console generation.
I bought a PS3 at launch. My friends made fun of me for spending that much on a gaming console. Later, three friends of mine each went through four Xbox 360s due to RRoDs, while I know many more that went through two or three. Meanwhile, my launch PS3 continued to work like a champ until I traded it in a few years ago.
That $600 was a bargain compared to a cheaper console that people had to buy three or four times.
We're facing a recession. I don't care how powerful it is, nobody is buying a 500 dollar console and Sony knows it. They tried this before with the PS3 and it cost them a console generation.
I bought a PS3 at launch. My friends made fun of me for spending that much on a gaming console. Later, three friends of mine each went through four Xbox 360s due to RRoDs, while I know many more that went through two or three. Meanwhile, my launch PS3 continued to work like a champ until I traded it in a few years ago.
That $600 was a bargain compared to a cheaper console that people had to buy three or four times.
In my circle of friends everyone eventually tired of the 360 hardware failures and had switched to PS3 in the later half of that generation. Had I known the 360 would be such a troubled piece of hardware I would have just bought a PS3 at launch and sat on it the whole generation.
Well, when a GPU for a PC can easily double or triple that price, I don't think it will be the end of the world. Blame price inflation and call it a day.
Did anyone actually think the PS5 would launch at less than $450 to begin with? The PS4 and Xbox One both launched well above that and I figured we're only going up from here given numerous factors. I never expected either the PS5 or the Series X to launch for less than $500, though I'm sure they'll go down over time.
> The current-generation PlayStation 4 reportedly cost $381 per unit to manufacture originally. At launch in 2013, units sold for about $20 more than that—a thin margin, to be sure, but a margin nonetheless.
I'm pretty sure retailers didn't sell the console for nothing. Sony took a loss on each one sold at that point.
My experience on this is not current, but I worked at GameStop during the XBox 360 launch (2005) and we netted almost nothing for the consoles, which had a minimum retail price set by the manufacturer. There's a reason the company relies so hard on making up sales in high-margin used games. Big-box stores make it up in other sections.
This Canadian actually bought his day-one PS4 cheaper than Americans because Sony kept the pricing on par with USD despite the fact our dollar had started to take a hit. A few months later Sony corrected the pricing and Canadians who waited ended up paying more. Fast forward to 2020 and I already know I'll be purchasing a PS5 for more than the PS4. Doesn't really matter from my POV as $600-900 for a console that will last a decade is a lot better than the $1000+ I spend on a phone that is toast in a couple years.
> The current-generation PlayStation 4 reportedly cost $381 per unit to manufacture originally. At launch in 2013, units sold for about $20 more than that—a thin margin, to be sure, but a margin nonetheless.
I'm pretty sure retailers didn't sell the console for nothing. Sony took a loss on each one sold at that point.
My experience on this is not current, but I worked at GameStop during the XBox 360 launch (2005) and we netted almost nothing for the consoles, which had a minimum retail price set by the manufacturer. There's a reason the company relies so hard on making up sales in high-margin used games. Big-box stores make it up in other sections.
I second this. I worked at BestBuy from 2006-2008 when the Wii was flying off the shelves and PS3's were still hard to find. BestBuy's employee discount at the time was wholesale + 5%. Our discount was zero on all game consoles. Both because there was zero margin (we were expected to up sell games, accessories, and warranties) and because I think it was a policy from Nintendo/MS/Sony to discourage employees from buying and reselling consoles on eBay.
Err, what country are you in? I had two replacements, one under warranty, the other not, and both were as good as customer service can be. The 2nd replacement still runs fine...although I never turn it on anymore, with how good the backward compatibility is on the One.We're facing a recession. I don't care how powerful it is, nobody is buying a 500 dollar console and Sony knows it. They tried this before with the PS3 and it cost them a console generation.
I bought a PS3 at launch. My friends made fun of me for spending that much on a gaming console. Later, three friends of mine each went through four Xbox 360s due to RRoDs, while I know many more that went through two or three. Meanwhile, my launch PS3 continued to work like a champ until I traded it in a few years ago.
That $600 was a bargain compared to a cheaper console that people had to buy three or four times.
Why did your friends do that? I had 3 or 4 360's crap out on me and Microsoft replaced them for free every time, even when they were out of warranty. They thew in a couple of free months of Xbox Live in addition.
Don't get me wrong, the issues with the 360 were an unmitigated disaster, however their customer service response was pretty stellar in my experience.
My 360 got the red ring and Microsoft told me it's out of warranty and I should have bought an extended warranty through Futureshop (where I bought the 360). Your experience is probably made up or an isolated scenario. I ended up buying a PS3 instead and haven't left Sony's ecosystem. I was a die-hard original Xbox fanboy as well and the 360 ruined that.
We're facing a recession. I don't care how powerful it is, nobody is buying a 500 dollar console and Sony knows it. They tried this before with the PS3 and it cost them a console generation.
I bought a PS3 at launch. My friends made fun of me for spending that much on a gaming console. Later, three friends of mine each went through four Xbox 360s due to RRoDs, while I know many more that went through two or three. Meanwhile, my launch PS3 continued to work like a champ until I traded it in a few years ago.
That $600 was a bargain compared to a cheaper console that people had to buy three or four times.
Why did your friends do that? I had 3 or 4 360's crap out on me and Microsoft replaced them for free every time, even when they were out of warranty. They thew in a couple of free months of Xbox Live in addition.
Don't get me wrong, the issues with the 360 were an unmitigated disaster, however their customer service response was pretty stellar in my experience.
My 360 got the red ring and Microsoft told me it's out of warranty and I should have bought an extended warranty through Futureshop (where I bought the 360). Your experience is probably made up or an isolated scenario. I ended up buying a PS3 instead and haven't left Sony's ecosystem. I was a die-hard original Xbox fanboy as well and the 360 ruined that.
This Canadian actually bought his day-one PS4 cheaper than Americans because Sony kept the pricing on par with USD despite the fact our dollar had started to take a hit. A few months later Sony corrected the pricing and Canadians who waited ended up paying more. Fast forward to 2020 and I already know I'll be purchasing a PS5 for more than the PS4. Doesn't really matter from my POV as $600-900 for a console that will last a decade is a lot better than the $1000+ I spend on a phone that is toast in a couple years.
I'm planning on investing in a PS5 at launch - my understanding is it'll basically treat PS4 games like it's a PS4 Pro, so as a PS4 owner who skipped the Pro, I'll be getting an upgrade to my current PS4 games to a better-than-pro experience (thanks SSD) and setting myself up for the next generation, too.
I'm happy to drop $600 on that.
So many people never seem to check inflation,
Did anyone actually think the PS5 would launch at less than $450 to begin with? The PS4 and Xbox One both launched well above that and I figured we're only going up from here given numerous factors. I never expected either the PS5 or the Series X to launch for less than $500, though I'm sure they'll go down over time.
I paid $399 CAD for my PS4 on launch day. That is definitely not more than $450 USD you claim it is. ;-)
Odd that Microsoft, not Sony, would use that as a codename.Lockhart
If the old playstation BOM was $381 and it sold for $20 more, there would still be a negative margin for Sony. The retailers definitely weren't selling it for a loss. Not sure what the retailers' margin would be but it would have to be at least 15% if not the normal 30%.
We're facing a recession. I don't care how powerful it is, nobody is buying a 500 dollar console and Sony knows it. They tried this before with the PS3 and it cost them a console generation.
I bought a PS3 at launch. My friends made fun of me for spending that much on a gaming console. Later, three friends of mine each went through four Xbox 360s due to RRoDs, while I know many more that went through two or three. Meanwhile, my launch PS3 continued to work like a champ until I traded it in a few years ago.
That $600 was a bargain compared to a cheaper console that people had to buy three or four times.
How would the digital only next gen Xbox be half the price? That sounds impossible without making it almost a streaming only box.
This Canadian actually bought his day-one PS4 cheaper than Americans because Sony kept the pricing on par with USD despite the fact our dollar had started to take a hit. A few months later Sony corrected the pricing and Canadians who waited ended up paying more. Fast forward to 2020 and I already know I'll be purchasing a PS5 for more than the PS4. Doesn't really matter from my POV as $600-900 for a console that will last a decade is a lot better than the $1000+ I spend on a phone that is toast in a couple years.
I'm planning on investing in a PS5 at launch - my understanding is it'll basically treat PS4 games like it's a PS4 Pro, so as a PS4 owner who skipped the Pro, I'll be getting an upgrade to my current PS4 games to a better-than-pro experience (thanks SSD) and setting myself up for the next generation, too.
I'm happy to drop $600 on that.
I'm in the same boat. I still use my day-one PS4 and never bothered upgrading the console. I just upgraded the hard-drive. The PS5 is going to force me to finally go out and buy a 4K TV though. I feel that will basically be a requirement for the next generation and I'll be missing out if I just stick to 1080 for another generation.