Im wondering wut to get, ps3 or xbox360, i dont need anybody telling me to get the wii because I have it. I need good reasons to buy both.
--thanks--
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What ever floats yo boat.Im wondering wut to get, ps3 or xbox360, i dont need anybody telling me to get the wii because I have it. I need good reasons to buy both.
--thanks--
llamanu
Im wondering wut to get, ps3 or xbox360, i dont need anybody telling me to get the wii because I have it. I need good reasons to buy both.
--thanks--
llamanu
Just look at what games will be coming out and pick the console with the games you want to play. Simple as that.
It took time for Sony to own the market with the PS2 because of Dreamcast and the fact that the N64 was still selling well, the same will happen again with the PS3. Don't forget that people are still buying the PS2. Sony is doing a slow transition between the two consoles, just like PS one and PS2, it just wasn't posted on the Internet as much back then as it is today.iMacBot
...didn't u just post this somewhere else? :|
[QUOTE="iMacBot"]It took time for Sony to own the market with the PS2 because of Dreamcast and the fact that the N64 was still selling well, the same will happen again with the PS3. Don't forget that people are still buying the PS2. Sony is doing a slow transition between the two consoles, just like PS one and PS2, it just wasn't posted on the Internet as much back then as it is today.musicalmac
...didn't u just post this somewhere else? :|
Yes I did. It was relevant to that topic as well.
[QUOTE="llamanu"]Im wondering wut to get, ps3 or xbox360, i dont need anybody telling me to get the wii because I have it. I need good reasons to buy both.
--thanks--
musicalmac
Just look at what games will be coming out and pick the console with the games you want to play. Simple as that.
He said it already.
[QUOTE="llamanu"]Im wondering wut to get, ps3 or xbox360, i dont need anybody telling me to get the wii because I have it. I need good reasons to buy both.
--thanks--
VoodooHak
Xbox 360. It has the stronger library and better online.
Both consoles are fun to play. XBOX 360 does have more games at the moment but it has the same amount of good games as the PS3. It's really up to you to decide. You should also consider performance, PS3's specs are a notch higher than XBOX 360's wich means the technology used will last longer on the market, similarly to PS2. XBOX 360 sells more and has more games, if that's what you want go ahead with that. If you have a lot of expendable money, get both lol.
[QUOTE="DaysAirlines"]PS3. All the 360 does is play PS3's exlusive games.musicalmac
HAHA. You slay me, sir.
That's what I'm here for.Copied from PlayStation 3 forum:
This is proof that history always repeats itself!
PS2 was known as the best selling console of all time, with the best games, yet look at this news posting from the beginning.
Don't buy that PlayStation
It's overpriced and has no online access, and hardly any good games are available to play on it.
- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Jim Lynch
Oct. 27, 2000 | Whether or not Sony was sincere in its claim that a supply crisis led it to cut its initial shipments of the PlayStation2 to just 500,000 units, there's little question that the corporation was successful in the arena of hype marketing. Lines of obsessed PlayStation fans were a news staple Wednesday. But is the so-called superconsole really worth staying up all night for?
No. The PS2 is not the revolutionary device that Sony's marketing department would have you believe. Don't get me wrong; it's definitely the most powerful video-game machine on the planet right now. But that's not enough.
And don't expect a huge number of quality games anytime soon. Sony has reversed positions with Sega and stupidly released a system that is in many ways a game developer's nightmare. Sega, learning from its Saturn debacle, went out of its way to make the Dreamcast easy to develop games for. But Sony, intoxicated with success from the first PlayStation, forgot the first rule of the video-game industry: Software sells systems. If you make it hard for developers to produce good games then there's no reason for people to buy the system. This oversight has already cost Sony some goodwill -- developers are howling about how hard it is to create games for the system. In an interview with Time magazine, John Carmack, one of the developers behind such massively popular games as Doom and Quake, said that the "PS2 is definitely more powerful than Dreamcast. But it's less convenient to extract performance from it."
Sony is also under the mistaken impression that including the ability to play DVD movies is a huge selling point. But true technophiles and hardcore gamers probably already have DVD drives. I'm a good case in point. I already own a Sony DVD player, so I could not care less if the $299 PS2 can play movies. I'd rather pay less and get a machine that just plays games instead.
In comparison, the Sega Dreamcast sells for $149 and has a giant library of games already available. Sega also has an online game network, Seganet. The Dreamcast comes with a built-in 56K modem and Sega will soon release a broadband (cable/DSL) adapter for it. (The PS2 does not ship with a modem.) Sega is banking on the appeal of multiplayer online gaming, even going so far as to rebate the entire cost of a Dreamcast to players who sign up for Seganet. And for the first time ever we actually have cross-platform online gaming -- Seganet lets Dreamcast players compete against PC players in games like Quake 3. Sony, on the other hand, is promising online gaming later on but currently has nothing to offer purchasers of the PS2.
In addition to Sega, Sony also has two 800-pound gaming gorillas breathing down its neck: Nintendo and Microsoft. Nintendo plans to release its powerful GameCube system next year. Don't downplay Nintendo's chances either. Despite having a rocky time with the N64, Nintendo has some of the most lucrative franchises in video-game history on its side (Zelda, Super Mario Brothers, Metroid, etc.) and a superb marketing machine.
The real wild card here, though, is Microsoft, which plans to release its X-Box game system next year. The Xbox will have even more powerful hardware than the PS2, and Microsoft has the marketing muscle and rapport with developers to do the PS2 real damage. Unlike Sony, Microsoft is taking great pains to make sure the X-Box is easy to make games for -- developers will also be able to easily port games from the PC to the X-Box, thus insuring a huge supply of games.
So should you feel bad if you can't get a PS2 right away? No way. If you wait a while you'll avoid all the lines and scuffling in stores and you'll end up with a much better selection of games. And if you wait long enough for the upcoming systems from Microsoft and Nintendo, you'll probably see a cut in the price of the PS2 as Sony tries to ward off both threats.
Hardcore gamers aren't known for their patience, but this is one occasion when playing it smart may mean not playing at all. For now.
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