Slimline PlayStation 2 for £60 – 360 Spoiler Looms

Retail reports aggressive move by Sony and Nintendo.

Posted by Staff
Slimline PlayStation 2 for £60 – 360 Spoiler Looms
Retail sources speaking exclusively to SPOnG have suggested that Sony is poised to slash the price of the slimline PlayStation 2 to between £60 and £70 in the UK this Christmas, provoking what could be the most bountiful holiday season for shoppers in some time.

It was also claimed that Nintendo will make a similar move with its GameCube console, backed and buoyed by the release of the new Zelda game Twilight Princess, slated for launch in late summer. Official double bundle packs featuring Resident Evil 4 and Mario Kart are also expected.

“You can expect significant reductions in the price of everything this Christmas, but most noticeable will be the PlayStation 2,” our well-placed source told SPOnG. “We’ve been briefed to expect a price as low as £60 beginning at the start of December. Sony’s probably looking at a global price cut – around $100 in the States and a serious Platinum range announcement too.”

Our source continued, "Sony is aiming for total retail dominance at the time of the [Xbox] 360 launch. It’s a spoiler move and is shaping up to be quite an effective one.”

Expect an official announcement sometime in November.
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Comments

Showing the 20 most recent comments. Read all 26.
nasim007 29 Jul 2005 16:52
7/26
could prove to be a very effective move especially when the x360 is proved to be much inferior and less powerful compared to ps3.......x360 has absolutely no chance against ps3....most people would prefer ps2 rather than x360......i think sony would launch their console in sepetember 2006....by the time x360 might sell 5 million units but again that might not happen....THE CELL hype has demolished x360 ....it cannot win but certainly it could recover the opportunity costs for microsoft..
if ms is clever they sd leave the market

they are surely daydreaming....they expect to sell million consoles in japan where xbox sell only 150 consoles as opposed to 30000 for ps2 per month............with a console as superior as xbox they crashed in japan...now what made them think that they could sell significant number of units when it is already proved that their console is much inferior....although they have tagged up with the japanese developers the good titles like,DMCry,tekken,FF(one that is being developed exclusively for ps3) remain exclusive to ps3....even the games that were released way before on ps2 like dynasty warriors 5 ,ffXI....are now being released on x360!!!!lol.....how could someone be fooled this way???kuturagi's comment would come true....x360 would fight ps2 and die eventually...

gta san andreas sold over 13 million units on ps2 and just around 1 million units on xbox.....in order to mar ps2's image MS has invented stories comprising of an 85 year old who bought 17+ rated gta for her 14 year old grandson................what a shame....this is similiar to iraq invasion.....u cant do everything according to your wish..
PreciousRoi 29 Jul 2005 18:41
8/26
*proclaims 007 the neocarrillo memorial award winner*

(...For outstanding achievements in the field of Fanboyism)

pfft...twit.
more comments below our sponsor's message
fluffstardx 29 Jul 2005 21:16
9/26
It's right up there with "we will spoil PS3 launch with... a game". 3 rabid Sony fans I know have told me "oh my God, I am buying a 360. That PS3 looks s**t, and you can't deny it."

Sony are, frankly, bricking it. Industry peeps have said not too quietly "the gap between the 2 machines is not as big as Sony would like you to believe", Sony fans have railed against the design, MS have beaten them to market, and they've been undercut in price. They hope this will win a few more sales, and it will. But it won't stop early adopters. And that means, this plan's failed already.

I really, REALLY wish the GC sold better. Such a lovely, powerful, underappreciated machine. On the plus side, nice cheap Cube to play LoZ:TP on til I can get my hands on a Rev...
PreciousRoi 30 Jul 2005 04:04
10/26
The most pitiful thing about it is, I, though admittedly a layman, know enough about the two designs to know that people who know a lot more than I know, don't know...that is, exactly what either machine is truly capable of. Such will also, in my admittedly limited understanding depend increasingly upon the programmers ability to correctly and effectivly utilise the unique capabilities of the hardware in question. SO, Sony can trumpet 2 gigaWhoozits all they want, and they are, but I think that MS obviously has the edge in two or three important areas which will become crucial in the next cycle (online gaming/networking/media hub and HiDef).

But this wasnt supposed to be a response to the fanboy in question's argument (if it can be called such), because nothing is gonna get through to that guy, and I am certainly not about to take sides, though if I had to make a bet on something in the next gen it would be that Sony loses some market share to MS. (fanboys will no doubt read the preceding statment as:"MS will totally pwn Sony" so I will repeat myself...) MS will increase its own market share at the expense of Sony.

But in any event, making any judgements about the actual performance of EITHER machine is premature, the very designs of the processors make our current frame of references suspect and possibly obsolete-ish.

Oh yeah, hey, jackass, yeah, you... I just saw something on AOTS about that fictional grandmother, apparently shes filed a fictional lawsuit in fictional court, all the fictional media are probably covering it. Well MSNBC probably will, or do you think that would be too obvioous? Does that tinfoil hat of yours pick up MSNBC? If you have to watch Imus I feel sorry for you, might have something to do with why you disconnected from reality...something to think about when you go back on your meds....
fluffstardx 31 Jul 2005 00:02
11/26
I hate to pee in his milkshake, but the vast majority of consumers have no f**king idea what the hell CELL is, never mind what it can do.

And the people that do, my IT tech support mates, all think it sounds like an overcomplicated pile of tosh.
tyrion 1 Aug 2005 07:52
12/26
fluffstardx wrote:
And the people that do, my IT tech support mates, all think it sounds like an overcomplicated pile of tosh.

And yet the people who know more than your mates, i.e. the blokes at IBM who design chips for a living, thought it was good enough and powerful enough to design and build.

Also their managers thought it was good enough to fund development of and Sony and Toshiba management thought it was good enough to contribute funds to development and fabrication.

All of these companies are putting more money into the development of this chip than all of us put together will see in our collective lifetimes. They aren't doing this because they want to throw money away.

The guys at Epic thought it was good to develop for and ported the new Unreal engine to it in under a month.

But hold on! fluffstardx's IT tech support mates think it's an overcomplicated pile of tosh. Well, if that doesn't set the cat among the pigeons.

IBM, Sony and Toshiba are looking pretty stupid now! They shouldn't have spent all that money on their VLSI engineers, software engineers, design teams or fab plants. They should have just asked a few of fluffstardx's mates how complicated it looks.
sub uk 1 Aug 2005 09:42
13/26
tyrion wrote:
..snip...


lmao,

top quality.
config 1 Aug 2005 09:55
14/26
Welcome back, dude
kid_77 1 Aug 2005 10:13
15/26
And the devlopment tools are coming along nicely, apparently.

Sony recently acquired Blighty's very own SN Systems and formed "strategic alliances" with Ageia Technologies, Havok and Epic Games.

Will be interesting to see how XNA compares...
config 1 Aug 2005 10:46
16/26
kid_77 wrote:
And the devlopment tools are coming along nicely, apparently.

Sony recently acquired Blighty's very own SN Systems and formed "strategic alliances" with Ageia Technologies, Havok and Epic Games.

Will be interesting to see how XNA compares...


Keep in mind that the SN, Ageia, Havok stuff is destined for inclusion in the standard Dev Kit. The Epic "middleware" comes with a six month trial period, but has an additional fee for deployment - though I believe it's subsidised by SCE.

While we're on this subject, does anybody have any idea why SCE would licence Havok AND Ageia? Two physics middleware solutions seems a bit pointless, unless there are some key points that aren't shared.
fluffstardx 1 Aug 2005 15:08
17/26
tyrion wrote:
All of these companies are putting more money into the development of this chip than all of us put together will see in our collective lifetimes. They aren't doing this because they want to throw money away.


Well, Sir Clive Sinclair did that with the C5. You saying that worked out well? And IBM have made some massive losses investing in stuff that never paid off - like OS/2 Warp.

Sony, now Sony rely on Playstation to live apparently; last figure I heard was 60% of revenue. Toshiba... make stuff. Hardly a massive marketing force.

Oh yes, those people make chips... IT people have to DEAL WITH THEM. I know I'd rather replace the cheap triplicate chips than the overblown heatbucket. Why do you think hardly any system builders who are building for themselves use Pentiums anymore?

They've pumped a ton of money into something they have no idea will gain any back, promised us better performance by sharing them all over the world... well, if that idea works so well why aren't IT companies going crazy over the idea? Heck, PCs arguably would be the easiest to use it thanks to the internet, but you don't hear of CELL powered PCs now do you?

No, I don't trust IBM, master of mockups. Toshiba and Sony are hardly high on my "great manufacturers of digital goods" list. So why the hell would I listen to them over people who day in day out repair all sorts of processors in machines of varying complexity running things far more complex than a sodding Playstsation game?
config 1 Aug 2005 16:53
18/26
fluffstardx wrote:
Oh yes, those people make chips... IT people have to DEAL WITH THEM. I know I'd rather replace the cheap triplicate chips than the overblown heatbucket. Why do you think hardly any system builders who are building for themselves use Pentiums anymore?

What exactly do you mean by "IT people"? It's such a vague term it could range from ALSI engineers through to front-line support staff (though I've found it's typically used when refering to those occupying the latter end of that scale)
Unless your IT people deal in the realm of coding games or VLSI engineering, I'm not sure their opinion is worth all that much.

Right now, the only people I would listen to WRT coding for CELL are the coders at Epic and the middleware engineers at IBM or Sony. They're the ones tackling the thorny issue of effective thread management on a multi-core processor.

They've pumped a ton of money into something they have no idea will gain any back, promised us better performance by sharing them all over the world... well, if that idea works so well why aren't IT companies going crazy over the idea? Heck, PCs arguably would be the easiest to use it thanks to the internet, but you don't hear of CELL powered PCs now do you?


WE FEAR CHANGE

Oh, and the small fact that the processor isn't in mass production yet. It's gonna be a tad diffucult to design and ship CELL-based PCs without any processors.
Plus... CELL isn't Intel, so there's gotta be *some* work done before all those Wintel apps run on CELL.

No, I don't trust IBM, master of mockups. Toshiba and Sony are hardly high on my "great manufacturers of digital goods" list.


You're right to not trust them. All mega corps are masters of bullshit. But to dismiss such a huge investment out of hand..?

So why the hell would I listen to them over people who day in day out repair all sorts of processors in machines of varying complexity running things far more complex than a sodding Playstsation game?

Repair processors? That's highly complex stuff that, well, nobody does because it's just not worth the effort.

If you're talking about pulling apart PCs, diagnosing faults, replacing dead components, putting them back together - yeah, that's WAY more complex than coding pissy console games.

tyrion 1 Aug 2005 17:39
19/26
fluffstardx wrote:
tyrion wrote:
All of these companies are putting more money into the development of this chip than all of us put together will see in our collective lifetimes. They aren't doing this because they want to throw money away.


fluffstardx wrote:
Well, Sir Clive Sinclair did that with the C5. You saying that worked out well? And IBM have made some massive losses investing in stuff that never paid off - like OS/2 Warp.

Hmm, Sir Clive was, shall we say, a bit eccentric. He hardly compares to three large, multinational companies collaborating on a CPU, does he?

As far as OS/2 (with or without Warp) goes, it was reasonably successful, probably made its money back and more, but didn't dent the Microsoft Monopoly. I'll bet Apple are about to run out of money since they only have about 5% of the desktop market, are they?

fluffstardx wrote:
Sony, now Sony rely on Playstation to live apparently; last figure I heard was 60% of revenue. Toshiba... make stuff. Hardly a massive marketing force.

Sony get a large amount of their income from the Playstation brand it's true, but I bet if they stopped making it and marketing it, their other divisions would just trundle along nicely like they used to.

I don't have any posts to hand, but many, many people on these forums have accused Sony of only getting where they are by marketing the hell out of the Playstation. They have a large marketing department that does good work. However, they aren't the ones that will be marketing the Cell.

And none of that has anything to do with whether Cell is a decent CPU or not.

fluffstardx wrote:
Oh yes, those people make chips... IT people have to DEAL WITH THEM. I know I'd rather replace the cheap triplicate chips than the overblown heatbucket. Why do you think hardly any system builders who are building for themselves use Pentiums anymore?

Please, anybody who replaces CPUs as a large part of their work probably does very little CPU design or low level programming on those CPUs.

Changing a Cell will be the same as changing a P4, the same as changing a G5, the same as changing the XBox 360 CPU if it ever gets into a computer. It's a very quick job that I've done on several of the PCs I've built and used.

Given the facts that I work in IT, have done for over 10 years, program on a daily basis and have studied microprocessor design, I think I have as much ability to comment on the Cell as your mates.

I know very little of the low-level workings of a CPU, but I have programmed distributed systems before and this is a similar architecture. The issue about ease of use will be a small one for the end users since IBM will provide low-level libraries and compiler back ends to make the game developer's job easier. Sony have also licensed several pieces of middleware which will be included with the PS3 dev kits. Epic have already said that Cell is easy to program for.

fluffstardx wrote:
They've pumped a ton of money into something they have no idea will gain any back, promised us better performance by sharing them all over the world... well, if that idea works so well why aren't IT companies going crazy over the idea? Heck, PCs arguably would be the easiest to use it thanks to the internet, but you don't hear of CELL powered PCs now do you?

Again, please! The reasons you haven't seen any Cell-powered PCs are many and varied, but here are a few that come to mind straight away.

1) Sony have bagged most of the first year's production of Cell CPUs for the PS3.

2) You would have to port an operating system to the new architecture and that takes more than the (roughly) six months since the Cell was unveiled.

3) You would have to get Microsoft to port Windows to the new CPU to have any chance of a large scale penetration of the PC market. Look how long it took them to port Windows to 64 bit CPUs.

As to the sharing CPUs over the Internet, please check out SETI@Home and other distributed processing projects that make use of many small CPUs to embarrass super computers.

fluffstardx wrote:
No, I don't trust IBM, master of mockups. Toshiba and Sony are hardly high on my "great manufacturers of digital goods" list. So why the hell would I listen to them over people who day in day out repair all sorts of processors in machines of varying complexity running things far more complex than a sodding Playstsation game?

If you have friends that repair processors in PCs, tell them to sell their skills to Intel!

Nobody repairs CPUs or any other type of chip. They replace them. Your friends may diagnose the faulty chip, they may even have a list of motherboard work arounds for common problems, but they do not repair CPUs.

To put it into perspective for you, your mates are the equivalent of car mechanics who can change an engine or a gearbox. A demanding and skilful job to be sure. However I wouldn't trust them to design a new type of engine. Nor would I expect them to be able to comment on the design of a new high-performance engine, engine management system or automatic gearbox control system.

I will freely admit I do not have the knowledge to make pronouncements on how good the Cell will be or how much better (if at all) it will be than the XBox 360 CPU. However, I don't make my living designing, building, integrating or writing low-level software for CPUs. Neither do your mates.

I think we should all listen to the people who have to use these CPUs at a low level to see what they have to say. We should probably also wait for some games to come out on the PS3 to see how well the whole architecture performs.

Calling the Cell an overcomplicated pile of tosh because you repair PCs and think you know how CPUs work is, not to be too blunt, getting a bit above yourself. Believing that person is, well, daft.
PreciousRoi 1 Aug 2005 20:20
20/26
tyrion wrote:
I will freely admit I do not have the knowledge to make pronouncements on how good the Cell will be or how much better (if at all) it will be than the XBox 360 CPU. However, I don't make my living designing, building, integrating or writing low-level software for CPUs. Neither do your mates.

I think we should all listen to the people who have to use these CPUs at a low level to see what they have to say. We should probably also wait for some games to come out on the PS3 to see how well the whole architecture performs.

Calling the Cell an overcomplicated pile of tosh because you repair PCs and think you know how CPUs work is, not to be too blunt, getting a bit above yourself. Believing that person is, well, daft.


I wholeheartedly agree, with a few caveats and clarifications...For instance above opinion, if formed from presumed reliable second hand informantion and insight, or merely a simple application of Occam's Razor/KISS, s**t mebbe he RTFM...so all I'm saying is that the opinion isn't neccessarily a display of laughable arrogance, even if does appear to be such.

Though incapable of making any knowledgeable pronoucements on the design of the Cell chip, if I look at the multiple cores as exctiting new features on Sony's new console, as Sony has failed to adequately support Link TWICE, I despair on thier behalf.

Yesterday, when thinking about the differences in design of the two processors, I actually felt a moments pity for EA, before my concern for myself and fellow gamers recovered, while pondering...

What Effect Will the Next Gen Consoles Differing Chip Designs Have On Multiplatform Game Development?

discuss...
tyrion 2 Aug 2005 08:15
21/26
PreciousRoi wrote:
I wholeheartedly agree, with a few caveats and clarifications...For instance above opinion, if formed from presumed reliable second hand informantion and insight, or merely a simple application of Occam's Razor/KISS, s**t mebbe he RTFM...so all I'm saying is that the opinion isn't neccessarily a display of laughable arrogance, even if does appear to be such.

This would be true if microprocessor magazines and news sources were laughing behind their hands when talking about the Cell, but from what I've seen, they remain cautiously optimistic and interested.

The only people who are being as negative about Cell as fluffy's mates are gamers who heard that the design of the Cell is similar to the design of the PS2 and those that hate Sony on sight.

Those gamers who "know" that the PS2 was hard to program for think that Cell will be harder to program for since there are more equivalents of the VPUs. However, the reason the PS2 was hard to program for was that there weren't any decent low-level libraries for the PS2 when it was introduced to developers. The Cell will have those libraries due in no small part to the involvement of IBM, who have already ported Linux to the Cell.

OK, Kutaragi-san isn't exactly trying to let any bad feeling die down with his Skynet-like future predictions, but he's basically a hype machine in public these days anyway. The sad fact is that apparently the current Cell architecture only allows two CPUs to be connected without any extra routing hardware.

PreciousRoi wrote:
Though incapable of making any knowledgeable pronoucements on the design of the Cell chip, if I look at the multiple cores as exctiting new features on Sony's new console, as Sony has failed to adequately support Link TWICE, I despair on thier behalf.

There seems to be a lot of this attitude around the internets these days. The attitude that Sony are responsible for every game that comes out on PS2 and that the reason we don't see innovative games that make full use of the PS2's features, like iLink, is all Sony's fault.

From where I sit (on the sidelines, jeering) the lack of innovative games is, in part, due to the massive presence of EA and their cookie cutter games. It is also partly due to the fact that the market seems to follow EA in producing "same old same old" type of games.

However some of the most innovative games on the PS2 have come from Sony studios themselves. EyeToy and Sing Star are the typicl examples, but even Primal and God of War did new things in their genres.

PreciousRoi wrote:
Yesterday, when thinking about the differences in design of the two processors, I actually felt a moments pity for EA, before my concern for myself and fellow gamers recovered, while pondering...

Wow game in feels pity for EA shocker! Maybe we should interview you! :-)

PreciousRoi wrote:
What Effect Will the Next Gen Consoles Differing Chip Designs Have On Multiplatform Game Development?

Simple, they will buy the best middleware they can lay their hands on. Hang on! EA already did that, they liked the middleware that much, they bought the company.

OK, so EA are happy with RenderWare under their belt. That covers every "$SPORT $YEAR" title going, plus NFS, Burnout and Harry Potter. I bet RockStar will keep on with RW, so that covers GTA games.

For any developer who doesn't want to get in to bed with EA over licensing RenderWare, Sony have licensed Unreal and Havoc for inclusion in the PS3 dev kits and Microsoft have XNA. Both of these environments will require a small amount of platform-specific code that will act almost as a hardware abstraction layer does for operating systems.

Of course, I've only covered PS3 and XB360 above, but Rev is so unknown at the moment, I wouldn't want to comment except to say it's supposed to be GC-compatible.

I don't think there will be too much of a problem for devs writing multi-platform releases, they already have to deal with from three to eight (by my count - PS1, PS2, PSP, XB, GC, GBA, DS & PC) differing hardware specs today, adding another two or three into the mix will slow them down a little, but not by much.
PreciousRoi 2 Aug 2005 08:28
22/26
s**te, just remembered....I've got a fetish for overcomplicated piles of tosh...I'd be the engineer trying to convince the programmer how great it is...
config 2 Aug 2005 08:59
23/26
tyrion wrote:
PreciousRoi wrote:
What Effect Will the Next Gen Consoles Differing Chip Designs Have On Multiplatform Game Development?

Simple, they will buy the best middleware they can lay their hands on. Hang on! EA already did that, they liked the middleware that much, they bought the company.


Here's one for the floor;

With both 360 and PS3 having PowerPC at their core, are we going to see a return to the bad old days of games written for the lowest common denominator (in this case, a single PPC), ignoring each machines additional CPU features (dual PPC for 360, and seven SPUs for PS3)?

It would certainly "solve" the issue for coding for multi-core architectures!
PreciousRoi 2 Aug 2005 09:04
24/26
tyrion wrote:
PreciousRoi wrote:
Though incapable of making any knowledgeable pronoucements on the design of the Cell chip, if I look at the multiple cores as exctiting new features on Sony's new console, as Sony has failed to adequately support Link TWICE, I despair on thier behalf.

There seems to be a lot of this attitude around the internets these days. The attitude that Sony are responsible for every game that comes out on PS2 and that the reason we don't see innovative games that make full use of the PS2's features, like iLink, is all Sony's fault.

From where I sit (on the sidelines, jeering) the lack of innovative games is, in part, due to the massive presence of EA and their cookie cutter games. It is also partly due to the fact that the market seems to follow EA in producing "same old same old" type of games.

However some of the most innovative games on the PS2 have come from Sony studios themselves. EyeToy and Sing Star are the typicl examples, but even Primal and God of War did new things in their genres.


This is an issue that first began to vex me with the second generation of PS games, specifically I was flabbergasted at the lack of Link support for Test Drive 5 and Cool Boarders 3. I think someone from Sony should have been nudging developers toward using it, and they should have used it themselves, not cast it aside...Hell, if Gran Turismo 2 had linked...If Medal of Honor had linked...

I don't let MS off on this issue either, more Link games should have been availible pre-LIVE!...and unless a developer can provide a valid reason for not doing so, all controls should be fully configurable. Its not as though the console manufacturers are complely powerless, and thier first party titles have to provide the example.

If they are going to tout a feature to sell me a console, they bloody well better do what they can to see that its supported. I also think fully configurable controls should be a requirement, barring a damn good reason for not .

tyrion wrote:
PreciousRoi wrote:
Yesterday, when thinking about the differences in design of the two processors, I actually felt a moments pity for EA, before my concern for myself and fellow gamers recovered, while pondering...

Wow game in feels pity for EA shocker! Maybe we should interview you! :-)


I've been playing EA games for an long time, I remember seeing Racing Destruction Set in the store, prolly my second favorite C64 game, after Elite, of course. The packaging they used in those days was pure genius. Made the programmers almost look like rock stars, or at least, popular authors. Sad whats become of them, they were the best, now they are merely wealthy.
PreciousRoi 2 Aug 2005 09:20
25/26
or will it all be written just like it would be for a single CPU and all the messy buisness it taken care of automagically? Is that the power of the Cell?

are three heads better than seven?

Cerbrus vs. Hydra...theres an idea, EA could do a non-book related Harry Potter game...release for both platforms, Xbox version, final boss is Hydra, PS3 version final boss is "Fluffy"
esveno 7 Aug 2005 20:38
26/26
Yes it is a spoiler but not that much. It is hard to see HARDCORE gamers NOT BUYING a xbox360. BUt casual and average gamers will not. I AM WAITING FOR PS2 slimline to drop. I still don't have ONE, but i have an old ps2 and ps1 that have not bogged down yet. WONT BUY xbox360 though, so as tell microsoft that WINDOWS in PC is enough microsoft for me. STAY IN software (even the browser is use is FIREFOX). let hardware players do the HARDWARE.
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