Posts Tagged ‘PSP2’

The PSP2 is not doomed

January 16th, 2011

Doom has been called on current generation consoles many times in the past few years. The Wii was doomed when it was first announced, the PS3 was doomed when its price tag was revealed, the Xbox 360 was doomed when the PS3 began to outsell it, and the doom changed hands between the high-definition consoles thereafter. Rarely is doom called, however, on a handheld, especially one which is unreleased, but this hasn’t prevented quite a few people, including esteemed analyst Michael Pachter, from predicting that Sony’s next handheld will be destroyed by the 3DS.

The Nintendo DS has already sold a mind-boggling 145 million units, and the PSP has managed a respectable 65 million. Both are selling very well indeed, but there is no doubt in anyone’s mind that, in the sales battle, the Nintendo DS is the clear winner and, indeed, the best-selling console of all time. But this is the past, and what’s done is done. The future of handheld gaming, iPhone and Android aside (as they are technically phones rather than consoles), is the Nintendo 3DS, and Sony’s yet-to-be-revealed-or-even-confirmed (despite the fact that everyone already knows) second PSP system, hereafter referred to as the PSP2 for simplicity’s sake.

The 3DS was announced to enormous fanfare at last year’s E3 conference, and you’d be hard pressed to find anyone who didn’t find the system at worst, interesting and innovative, and at best, perhaps the greatest handheld ever and a masterpiece of design. It has enormous amounts of Nintendo first-party support (including some franchises not seen for years such as Kid Icarus) as well as third-party support, with some old favourites, such as Metal Gear Solid, Resident Evil and Kingdom Hearts, being released on the console with 3D support. And that’s just what’s been announced so far. On top of that, you have fantastic hardware, including an analog stick for the first time on a Nintendo handheld, and dual CPUs, a 133MHz GPU and 64MB RAM. Some say the games already look as good as Wii games, but in 3D.

Perhaps the only slight drawback, if you can call it that, is a relatively high price point of US$300 (rumoured, but the Japanese price of 25,000 yen is equal to just slightly more than this). To compare, the original Nintendo DS launched at $150, or half the price. The DS Lite, the DS’ bestselling model, launched at just $130. The PSP cost considerably more, at $250, and this led to weak early sales despite a very strong opening.

We don’t know a whole lot about the PSP2, other than the fact that it exists (and it definitely exists, is in developers’ hands, and has a first-generation development kit ready). There’s a fair bit that we’re pretty sure we know, though. Firstly, it does not support 3D, or if it does, it’s a very well-hidden secret (bear in mind that we’re discussing Sony here). Secondly, it has dual analog sticks, which means no more shooters in which you aim with the face buttons. Thirdly, there is a touch-sensitive trackpad on the back. Fourthly, it is allegedly as powerful as the PS3. Fifthly, it has a high-definition screen and twice the RAM of an Xbox 360 (giving it a whopping gigabyte of RAM). So, firstly, any allegations that the PSP2 will be weaker than the 3DS are…questionable.

What we definitely don’t know, and cannot even really guess, is the system’s price tag. There’s clearly some pretty serious hardware in there. On top of this, the price of the PSP-Go, which was really just a PSP-3000 with a nice sliding screen, some flash storage and no UMD drive, was $80 higher than the 3000, and thus very few bought it. Sony later tried to rationalise this by stating that they never expected anyone to buy it, or some such thing. Fortunately, the PSP2 does have a “media format”, so that fear can disappear as well.

We also don’t know much about the system’s game line-up, but it should get a fair bit of first party support, since there are a few Sony Computer Entertainment studios, including Sony Bend and Titan Studios, that haven’t been doing anything much for a while. The developers of the new Mortal Kombat game have their hands on at least one developer kit and actually seem to like it, which suggests that quite a few third-party studios would have seen and used the system. Besides, no Sony console has ever really had a problem with game line-up for very long. Where the problem exists to begin with (such as with the PS3), it is remedied soon afterwards.

Think of the last console that actually met doom. Arguably, the DreamCast. The successor to a console which had already performed badly. A console in a market with three other consoles, following a full generation of Sony dominance (no, the DS did not dominate the PSP to anywhere near the extent that the PlayStation dominated the Saturn and N64). These are the conditions in which doom can possibly take place. As I stated in my introduction, pretty much every console of the last decade has been “doomed” at one point or another, often more than once, and has recovered almost every time.

Back to the PSP2 specifically, we really don’t know enough about it to be prophesising. It’s true that it probably won’t sell as much as the 3DS, but does that really matter in the grand scheme of things? Nintendo’s next handheld will almost certainly cross the border into nine-figure territory, but surely even 50 million sales is perfectly respectable for any system, bearing in mind that only nine systems have ever passed this mark, and that no non-Nintendo handheld, other than the PSP, has ever sold over 11 million units? In fact, to cross the 50 million mark, the PSP2 would have outsold the Super Nintendo, arguably the greatest console in history.

The PSP2 is set to be officially announced on 27th January. If it is revealed that the system will retail for $999 and will feature only Imagine: Gerbilz and Pixeljunk Racers 2 as launch titles, I will be happy to join the “PSP2 is doomed!” bandwagon. Until then, however, we should at least give the thing a chance. You never know, it could even have four dimensions.

Source:http://gamrfeed.vgchartz.com/story/83535/the-psp2-is-not-doomed/

‘Key Studios’ Receive PSP2 Dev Kits

September 29th, 2010

Sony’s PlayStation Portable ain’t doing so good. In fact, it’s faring so poorly in terms of retail sales that market research leaders NPD Group have even stopped bothering to track its progress. Or lack thereof. Ouch. Dead last in monthy hardware rankings and ignored by an ever-rolling industry, Sony have nonetheless decided to forge ahead with the sequel to its ailing portable. Rumours are afoot that big plans are on the table for the PSP2…

Reportedly, ‘key studios’ have already received PSP2 development kits in preparation for a ‘significant launch window line-up’, but when contacted for comment, Sony reps were mum, claiming it was all “rumour and speculation.”
So far, no details on the near-mythical new hardware are available except that, if you think Sony are going to follow the spectacular failure of the PSPgo (it sold only 863 units the week before last in the US) and hamper the PSP2 with download-only capabilities, think again: PlayStation CEO Kazuo Hirai is adamant that physical media will be a big part of the PSP follow-up’s future.

Source:-http://games.on.net/article/10335/Key_Studios_Receive_PSP2_Dev_Kits

PSP2 hardware now in the hands of ‘numerous’ developers

September 27th, 2010

Sony is reportedly giving more and more developers access to the successor to the soon to be six-year-old PSP, with dev kits in the hands of (or en route to) “numerous development studios.”

Develop cites “multiple industry sources” who claim that the “PSP2″ is gearing up for a “significant launch window line-up,” with developer-only hardware in the hands of Sony’s internal teams and third-party video game makers. A developer at Mortal Kombat studio NetherRealm recently claimed the Warner Bros.-owned studio had PSP2 hardware.

We’ve never lacked for unconfirmed information on Sony’s next handheld games machine. According to some reports, it has touch controls on its posterior, while others point to a gaming device that also acts as a smart phone and e-reader.

Sony, for its part, is not yet talking openly about the successor to the PlayStation Portable. The original PSP has sold more than 62 million units across multiple configurations, according to Sony.

Source:-http://kotaku.com/5649239/report-psp2-dev-kits

Sony has ‘No Plans’ for 3D in the PSP 2?

June 26th, 2010

Nintendo’s up-and-coming 3DS has received a lot of solid buzz – i.e. about the greatest thing since the serendipitous combination of chocolate and peanut butter. However, not everyone gets butterflies when they think about the 3DS – especially Sony Computer Entertainment CEO Kaz Hirai as well as Sony Worldwide Studios VP, Scott Rohde.

Bet you didn’t see that coming.

When asked about his thoughts on the 3DS and the future of the PSP in a recent interview with Industry Gamers, Rohde went on record with the kind of typical PR jargon that backhand compliments the competition – while leaving just enough wiggle room in case 3D handhelds turn out to be the next big thing:
“To me, I love how the industry evolves. People come up with new ideas. It’s an interesting idea for a technology. I’m, personally, very curious to see how it takes hold with the marketplace, whether people are into that experience or whether it’s just a little too foreign to them. It’s going to be a great experiment.”

When asked point-blank whether or not the PSP2 will incorporate 3D effects, Rohde responded emphatically:

“No, no plans for that.”

Well, the thing about plans is that they tend to change. Sony has a reputation, rightly or wrongly, for bad-mouthing their competitors only to turn around and incorporate similar ideas in their own consoles. You know, things like a pay-to-play online service or not-quite-100% backwards compatibility as well as motion controls. Stuff like that.

It’s also hard to imagine that Sony, the company with the most 3D-focused hardware of all the home consoles, isn’t going to push the tech along every possible avenue.

What do you think of Rohde’s comments? Do you think Sony has a 3D handheld en route?

Source:http://gamerant.com/sony-psp-2-3d-poole-27423/

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