billybonkers wrote: » Do you really see it outperforming at €1200 GPU?
shaveAbullock wrote: » But that was because of the price of the 360. The challenge is not to get well below a $600 price point but to be competitive to what Microsoft is offering. Just to put it in perspective $600 in 2006 is the equivalent of close to $800 today when you allow for inflation. Sony won't go that crazy this time, the price will be well below $800!
H3llR4iser wrote: » I really, really hope I am wrong. The fact no prices have been spoken of, by either company, kinda sends a "ehrm...are you sitting down? Right..." kinda vibe...
H3llR4iser wrote: » I don't know, I've seen plenty of speculation about USD 400-500 around, but the fact is this: the upcoming consoles are, for the first time in two generations, actually bringing some innovation and cutting edge technology to the scene. Back in the day, both the PS3/Xbox360 and PS4/Xb One generations were comparable to a contemporary entry level gaming PC, especially CPU side, and used pretty much derivative hardware. The upcoming ones are using current hardware (Zen 2), GPUs comparable to the mid/mid-high tier of PC equivalents, hi-level specs (e.g. PCI-E 4.0) and are bringing some innovations of their own (well, AMD own, really), like the PS5's approach to SSD. I fear the price announcement will be quite a shocker, honestly, unless both Sony and MS decide to take a massive hit on the consoles in order to penetrate the market. I am kinda expecting something like 799 for the PS5 - and the Series X won't be far. Also, we're obviously gonna get the short end of the stick as usual - whatever figure it'll be in USD, will be the exact same in Euro, without consideration for the exchange rate nor the fact that the relative value of the same figure is much higher here. Suicide? Maybe, but we know the initial batch of consoles WILL sell out before they hit the shops, even if they were 2 grands, and the scarcity will cause piled up demand after Christmas. I really, really hope I am wrong. The fact no prices have been spoken of, by either company, kinda sends a "ehrm...are you sitting down? Right..." kinda vibe...
Penn wrote: » Can't remember where I saw it, but I think someone from Sony was implying that they're emphasising "value over price" or something like that. Which generally means.... expensive.
Stone Deaf 4evr wrote: » I reckon if they come out with those kind of prices, they'll just drive more people towards getting a PC, because you're getting too far into that territory by then.
H3llR4iser wrote: » Logic would dictate that, but never, ever underestimate the power of marketing. The vast majority of people still have the ingrained notion that a console is "no hassle", even 'though they've required online updates and patches for years (e.g. the Christmas-day debacle of a couple of years ago with kids opening up PS4s and XB1s and spending the whole day waiting for it to update).
Stone Deaf 4evr wrote: » Good point, as is often the case, when you design something very nice, like the PlayStation touch pad, it's never used to the best of its potential outside of first party applications.
johnny_ultimate wrote: » It’d be a catastrophic decision to release a new console that costs €800. Almost inevitable this’ll be a bit more expensive than the last gen at launch given the tech involved, but consoles are built around being affordable to a mass market. €800 for a games console is not affordable to a mass market. It’s a different prospect entirely to a smartphone or even a PC / laptop.
johnny_ultimate wrote: » As eye-watering and OTT as an iPhone X price is, I think more people will justify spending a lot on a decent phone because it’s such a central part of everyday life (plus there are various ways to offset the immediate cost). I don’t think the same argument can be made for a game console. Given the rise of Smart TVs and chromecasts, you can’t really consider the media player aspects that much of a value added extra these days either You also can’t forget how many people buy game consoles just to keep playing FIFA, CoD or a small number of titles as opposed to being brand loyalists. Happy to retract all these points if my eyes do indeed water at the price, but I remember the catastrophic PR of the PS3 price reveal - something I’m sure Sony will be keen to avoid. Certainly don’t think 500-600 is outside the realms of possibility (and even that price range I’d understand the corporate pressure for a cheap SKU in the digital only version), but 800 IMO would be an extremely risky gamble for Sony given the way we’ve seen consoles play out in the past - as recently as the XB1, even.
TitianGerm wrote: » It won't be over €600. I think that's the top end the majority or people will pay.
BloodBath wrote: » Hard to see the price being any less than €650-699 at launch unless they want to take a big hit to their pockets selling them at a loss which in fairness they might do especially if pushed on price by microsoft.
earthwormjack wrote: » Definitely. I'm thinking €549 myself. By the time people pay for the console, a couple of launch games and maybe a peripheral that price will climb quickly. Hopefully it'll be €549/499(Digital). Still a lot of machine for that price.
Wing126 wrote: » Consoles being sold at a loss to manufacturers has been happening since at least the PS2.
BloodBath wrote: » Not on the recent last gens. 8+ year old cpu and gpu architecture is cheap. There's only a couple of consoles that sold at a significant loss. It's cutting edge stuff in these. They may well still be losing significant money selling them at €599.
challengemaster wrote: » But they're also pushing this as an 8K ready system, as are microsoft for theirs.I also don't believe they'd consider anything below 24-30fps as playable for 8K, so it must be capable for that. That's way more than a RX 5700 xt can handle.
phobia2011 wrote: » Any info as to when the price will be revealed?
dan786 wrote: » Gamestop have added a PS5 tab to their homepage this evening. Maybe prices coming soon.