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NyghtcrawleR
The Future of PlayStation Portable
What is to come of the PSP? Over a dozen of the top developers tell us in a huge anniversary blow-out.
by Nix

US, March 23, 2007 - On March 24, 2005, Sony Computer Entertainment released the PlayStation Portable in North America.

At the time, there was nothing but tremendous hope and hype for the system. This was Sony, entering the handheld videogaming market. The first time this company entered a gaming market, Sony not only took over, it completely transformed it -- what was once considered a "kids' toy" (one that dad would occasionally sneak playtime on) was now the centerpiece of the entertainment area for every family member in every household across the globe. Videogames had evolved, and Sony was there just in time to embody the new generation of videogames, to be the embracing host for this emerging and expanding artform.

And now, Sony was going to take that same DNA and form something that gamers and entertainment seekers could take anywhere they go. All this, many thought, might happen all over again...

Two Years Later...

A lot can be said about what has gone right and what has gone wrong for PlayStation Portable since that launch, but one thing has been proven for certain: it's hard as anything to make it in the portable videogaming business. Nintendo is the only manufacturer to have survived it for the long haul, and even with its mighty franchises and its dominating control over this market, Nintendo has still not traversed the landmines perfectly -- major genres such as Sports, Shooters, Fighting and Racing have had difficulty finding interest in the handheld gaming audience even with the success of Game Boy and now DS, and to date, only one title has managed to ship on Nintendo DS with an ESRB M rating. If any company other than Nintendo were to have a chance at creating a fanbase and consumer audience in the handheld videogaming biz, it would be Sony. It had the clout, it has the developers and publishers, it had the franchises, it had the gamers, and it had the PlayStation vision of what videogamers want and what can be done with an entertainment device.

And, of course, it still has all of that. Although the PlayStation Portable has not quite changed the handheld videogaming market in the way that the two PlayStation consoles have (or, as SCE's current President Kazuo Hirai once put it, "...elevate portable entertainment out of the handheld gaming ghetto"), its successes are far too often ignored. This is the first major gaming system to have online-enabled games available at launch, and in a portable form no less. This is the system that brought full console-quality productions like Grand Theft Auto and Metal Gear Solid to a portable machine while even the enormous user base of the Nintendo DS system still has not convinced most publishers to spend the extra pennies on production value. (That said, DS may be missing a few voice-overs and some more expansive game concepts, but it has wooed away from consoles the epic Dragon Quest IX -- the shock that gamers expressed at that news showed that millions still didn't know that handheld gaming is no longer just Pokemon and Tetris.) This is the system that brought everything that is PlayStation into a market that previously only had one option for gamers looking to take the good times on the go.

But what about the competition, and what about the fact that Nintendo DS is clearly the best-selling portable on the market? Hell, the Nintendo Ds is the best-selling game system of this new generation, period -- nothing stands up to it as competition. But just because Nintendo is winning, does that mean that Sony has lost? If there is room for three console game systems, certainly there's room for two portable game systems (especially two with such different approaches and gaming audiences.) Sales have tipped in Nintendo's favor, but those numbers aside, PlayStation Portable has continued to moves units in its second year at around the same rate as all three hyped-up next-gen console systems. (In fact, market analyst David Cole told Next-Gen.biz that DS and PSP could end up with a bigger install base together than the three next-gen consoles combined.) Sony said before the battle began (back when many expected the DS vs. PSP battle to go the other way) that this wasn't a fight over pieces of a single pie but instead a challenge for each system to earn its own. The figures and bets have changed, but the company line is the same: the future of the PlayStation Portable has little to do with competition and everything to do with what this PlayStation handheld system is able to accomplish as a gaming and entertainment unit.

PSP: Year Three


So, what is the future of PlayStation Portable? On the anniversary of the system's launch, IGN has talked to a number of the top minds and most experienced creators working with PlayStation Portable to ask that question. Sony calls the future of gaming the "Game 3.0" era, and when you read through what they've said, you will know how PlayStation Portable fits into that future.

via IGN
Young Prodigy
MANNNN, the psp is gonna bomb. They ssuck at holding it together and making people like it. As long as Sony gets money, to helll with the customers.
quickett
There is no way the PSP is going to bomb! I hope you were being sarcastic.
spaz913
The PSP is too popular to bomb, because it's a favorite among Playstation fans.
josetplayer
lmfao.. "as sony gets money, the heck with the customers.." i dont think thats a fact... lol cuz they been doing this to long.. n have made quite some money..
Boy Palos
the PSP is getting more and more popular so i think... so much popular that I am seeing people even in the trains playing it or watching on it... whether it is a boy or girl... young or old... laugh.gif
thellmann
I don't think that the PSP will bomb due to what you get all wrapped up in this little beauty. For $200 (new) or $150 (used) you get a game system (capable of being other game systems such as nintendo, gba, atari, etc), a movie player with a beautiful wide screen, an MP3 player, a picture viewer, a remote for your TV, a web browser, and as time goes on more and more add ons. To show you how great of a deal this is, I want to compare this to the Sony MYLO that I bought recently for $350 (big mistake) this device does everything that the PSP does except play games, has a tiny screen, and it doesn't have homebrew capabilities. So even if Sony does nothing for it, this machine can keep you entertained while it evolves with help of the homebrew and hacker community. So quit hating tongue.gif and love your PSP, because you could be stuck with a DS that only plays lame games. Also be patient, because I'm sure that it is only a matter of time until there is a DS emulator and roms for the PSP. I think my two biggest complaints about the PSP are that the onboard memory needs to be raised to a gig or higher, and the screen needs to be a touch screen.
The Reverend Menagerie
One problem is clear.

Sony has almost always bombed at making things on a proprietary format. Betamax, anyone? It had better picture quality, but it was vastly outnumbered by the dominant brand, VHS.

Let's also think about the minidisc VS CD. I liked the minidisc, especially the storage and flexibility of swappig out music on one compared to CDRW. Yet CDRW, and now the iPod, have made the minidisc all but gone from stores.

UMD movies are following suit..... Price too high, and why buy it for your PSP at that price when you can load it from a memory stick straight from a DVD? UMD movies usually have none of those special features everyone seems to love as well.

They did a lot right with the PSP....but a lot wrong as well. Let's hope Sony learns from it.
HK88
nearly every1 i know owns one. its like a fashion accessory
johnnyd0513
Face smack blink.gif The PSP is not going to bomb. Its just too popular. Maybe years from now when we are looking at this page and saying: your right. But now. At least, not anytime soon.
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