Archive for the ‘Xbox 360, Xbox One’ Category

Game Consoles – November 2007 NPD Sales Figure Analysis

Friday, December 14th, 2007

The figures have just come out and there are some interesting developments, as predicted last month. November is always a crucial months for sales figures because this is when the traditional holiday sales period begins – to do well now in console sales will bode well for next year’s software sales. You can read last month’s analysis here. The figures are from NPD, a marketing research firm that releases games console sale data every month.

The figures for US sales in November are below, ranked in order of number of sales:

  • DS: 1,530,000 (Total: 15.1 million)  
  • Wii: 981,000 (Total: 6 million)
  • Xbox 360: 770,000 (Total: 7.9 million)
  • PSP: 567,000 (Total: 9.4 million)
  • PS2: 496,000 (Total: 39.9 million)
  • PS3: 466,000 (Total: 2.4 million)
  • NPD November 2007 Game Console US Sales Figures

    NPD Game Console Total US Sales Figures (as of November 2007)

    The first thing that strikes you as compared to previous months is the surge in sales for the Nintendo DS. It has gone from being second place, behind the Wii, to being top by a huge margin – a 234% increase as compared to last month! Otherwise, all the consoles have sold in greater numbers – the total sales of all game devices rose nearly 150% as compared to October’s figures.

    The Wii has had a great month, nearly shifting a million units despite stock shortages. The Xbox 360 is doing quite well as well, easily breaking October’s record (October being “Halo 3” month). PS3 sales nearly quadrupled (285% increase), thanks to the new 40 GB PS3 and on going promotions. But even such an increase, the next-gen market is still being dominated by the Wii and 360, with the 360 still holding a healthy lead over both the Wii and PS3 in terms of total consoles sold in the US. This month’s next-gen sale percentages show that the 360 held 34.7% of the next-gen market (down from 36.4% last month), the Wii with 44.3% (down from 51.6%) and the PS3 rose 21% (up from 12%). What it appears to show was that the PS3 sales gained market share mainly at the expense of the Wii and to a much lesser extent, the 360 – the lack of Wii stock might be a contributor here. Total sales figures to date suggests the Xbox 360’s lead has shrunk to just below 50% (48.5%, down 2.3%), with both the Wii (36.8%, up 1.1%) and PS3 (14.7%, up 1.2%) gaining, albeit by only slightly more than 1% each. 

    The portable market was dominated by the DS, and Sony will be disappointed that PSP sales did not increase as much as DS sales (the previous month’s 62/38 split in sales is now a much more impressive 73/27 split for the Nintendo handheld).

    The real problem for the PS3 now is not so much dominance of the Wii – Wii gamers are not always going to translate into PS3 gamers – but rather the way Xbox 360 is managing to hold on to it’s impressive lead. I’m sure Sony execs and fanboys alike expected 360 sales to slowly decline after the release of the PS3, but instead, sales have increased by a good amount, most likely due to the strong exclusive software lineup. The good news for Sony is that the PS3 is gaining market share, but perhaps too slowly for Sony’s liking – even though PS3 sales went up 285% in a single month, due to the 360 sale also rising (but at a slower rate), this incredible quadrupling of sales would only give PS3 parity with the 360 if it continues to make the same gains as it did this month. For this to happen is unlikely, since this month saw a jump in sale largely due to the price drop associated with the once off release of a new cheaper version of the console. If Sony can continue the price drops, then they could pull even within 2008, but whether Sony can afford to do it or not is another matter. And this will just spur more price cuts by Microsoft too, and they could afford it by recouping money lost from strong games sales. However you look at it, Microsoft’s decision to launch their console a year earlier has been a gamble that’s paid off – they’ve got themselves a very strong foothold in the console market, and it has set up a great platform for them to launch their next console (as opposed to launching the 360 off the very limited success of the original Xbox).

    As for Nintendo, let’s just say that those who hold Nintendo stock will have a very happy Christmas indeed.

    See you next month.

    Weekly News Roundup (9 December 2007)

    Sunday, December 9th, 2007

    Welcome to another weekly news roundup. I’ve been thinking about changing the name of this weekly feature, as “Weekly News Roundup” lacks a certain something. Perhaps “Digital Digest’s DVDGuy’s Digital Digest”, or “DVDGuy’s Dazzling Digital Diary”. Umm … I think I will stick with “Weekly News Roundup” for now.

    Now for something completely different. Starting with copyright news, Steve Biddle from New Zealand wrote in his blog about trying to do something very simply in Vista that Vista’s DRM system would not allow. All he wanted to do was to simultaneously output 5.1 audio through SPDIF and stereo audio output to his TV, but Vista won’t let him and would only allow SPDIF output at the same time if it carries a 2.0 channel signal. How does having this restriction prevent piracy, I’ll never know. Meanwhile, the troubled Bush administration has launched a new war on terror front, this time a war on copyright infringement. All those terrorists sitting in their caves downloading the latest episodes of Heroes must be quaking in their boots (if they do indeed wear boots). Seriously, does the White House have nothing better to do? They should just get back to what they do best, and that’s to make up intelligence to support yet another war in the Middle East. The MPAA is joining in the fight and says it’s in the best interest of ISPs to filter out “inappropriate” content. Last week (or the week before, I can’t remember), I also reported a story about the MPAA asking Universities to install software toolkits to monitor student’s Internet usages, in a bid to stop campus piracy. It has now been revealed that the “toolkit” may have violated copyright terms since it uses many pieces of open source software, and has modified them without providing the modified source code. The ISP hosting the toolkit has been sent a DMCA notice (haha). Perhaps this ISP should have filtered out the obviously “inappropriate” content. In other words, while the MPAA is forcing people to respect their interpretation of the copyright laws, they themselves might have been breaking the same laws to achieve their aim. Oh the irony.

    In HD news, LG has finally launched their dual format drive here in Australia. Their recommended retail price is more than double the store pricing of the same drive in the US, but some have found luck in getting the drive at a more reasonable $AUD 450. It’s still a bit too expensive to mark it as a must-have item for your next computer, but it’s a 50% price drop away from becoming just that. I will probably write another “If I were to buy a new computer today” blog entry this week, like the one I did back in September, and I must just include this drive in my recommended specs. Staying in Australia, retailers are saying the HD DVD people are not doing all they can for the Australian market. There is no point in denying this claim, because HD DVD has had a late and fairly quiet start, while Blu-ray has been going all guns blazing in the promotional stakes. Both sides are still doing poorly on pricing and releases though. The HD DVD side has been relying mostly on the Xbox 360 HD DVD add-on drive here in Australia, which was the only HD DVD player until about 3 months ago. But we still end up paying more and getting less for the add-on drive, as compared to the US in any case, where the pricing of the drive has dropped to less than $130 (although the price has gone back to $180 on Amazon.com at least), and includes 6 movies (we only get 1 free movie in the box). So much for the high Australian dollar. Another problem that people have been having here in Australia is trouble accessing the web content on titles such as Transformers. People with the US version of the movie (thank goodness for region-free HD DVDs) have not had the same problem, and according to the HD DVD group, the web features are very popular indeed. If you really had to compare Blu-ray to HD DVD, then on paper, HD DVD wins in everything but studio support. Early HD DVD release have better picture and sound quality than Blu-ray (most used VC-1, while older Blu-ray movies used the less efficient MPEG-2), most HD DVD releases are 30 GB compared to 25 GB for Blu-ray (BD-50 discs are still a small minority of releases, and HD-51 is coming soon), all HD DVD players and movies support advanced interactive features that not even the newest and most expensive Blu-ray player support and HD DVD hardware is cheaper too. But it doesn’t stop the myth that Blu-ray is superior to HD DVD, a myth that has been propogated by people such as Transformers director Michael Bay. Transformers on HD DVD is probably the best selling movie on either HD format so far, and of course it might sell more if it was a Blu-ray release too, but then I’m sure all his older movies would sell more if they were on HD DVD too. His claim that Microsoft deliberately supports HD DVD to get HD to fail, is tinfoil hat madness. Microsoft has lots of things invested in the success of HD (their VC-1 codec, used by the majority of Blu-ray and HD DVD releases, for one), and their digital distribution plans (of which is doing quite well in the US through Xbox Marketplace) is a completely separate issue. Sony also has digital downloads coming soon for the PS3, so do they wish HD to fail too? As for his claim that Blu-ray is superior …

    There’s a lot of HD news this week, so let’s start a new paragraph. Analysts have predicted that there will be parity between the two competing HD formats for the foreseeable future. I can’t see either format just fading away unless the studios all become exclusive for one side, so protect yourself by becoming format neutral. There are always rumours floating around the Warner Brothers, the only studio to be format neutral, is going to go format exclusive and supports Blu-ray only. You can read about what I think of this rumour in the link, but suffice to say, I don’t think it will happen (if anything, it might go the other way). HD DVD is certainly the weaker of the two sides when it comes to sales figures (although beware that the often quoted Nielsen HD sales figures do not include Wal-Mart, which came into the HD game quite late, but is now having an influence on things by being HD DVD exclusive, the Sony PS3 apart), but I can’t help but feel that it has a more mature strategy, rather than the “let’s sell as many PS3s as possible at a loss so we have lots of Blu-ray players in people’s homes, even if they don’t know what Blu-ray is” approach. There is a nice article that summarises the state of HD DVD, and its well worth a read. Speaking of the PS3, more and more rumours suggest that it will become Blu-ray profile 1.1 or 2.0 sometime soon. Unless there is some technical problem that prevents 1.1 or 2.0 certification (eg. if the cell processor can’t handle simultaneous multi-track video and audio decoding), then it’s a “when” not “if” in my opinion (that’s why I purchased a PS3 as my Blu-ray player). Still, it might take a while since there are hardly any 1.1, let alone 2.0, movies on sale. And we’re still waiting for DivX support, which was announced weeks before, but in that time, the Xbox 360 went ahead and added support for it already. YouTube HD coming soon via H.264? Not so far fetched with the power H.264 can offer.

    On that note, it’s on to gaming. Is it me or is the line between gaming and HD getting blurrier by the minute? Of course, here on Digital Digest we primarily cover the video aspect of gaming, so we’ve already intentionally blurred the lines. The holiday sales period is an important period to see which console will dominate in the year ahead. Analysts predict that the Xbox 360 and Wii will be side by side, followed by the PS3 by some distance (although not as distant as it used to be). Meanwhile, Nintendo has pulled ads for the Wii because demand is so high. Putting on Michael Bay’s tinfoil hat for a minute – does anybody else think that Nintendo might be deliberately not producing enough Wii’s to keep the demand up? It’s had a whole year to get the production up (Wii was last Christmas’ most wanted gift too), and it doesn’t seemed to have helped (if anything, this year’s stock is even less sufficient). And if you look at the low number of games being released in the same period, which would have crippled any other console, you do wonder why demand is still so high. Of course, that’s just conspiracy talk – the most likely explanation is that Wii is attracting non-gamers, and that’s a huge group of people who suddenly want a Wii for Christmas. Or that some people are hoarding stock to sell at a premium on eBay or something.

    So that’s it for another week. While you are all busy going from store to store to try and find a Wii, I will be here as usual gathering the news and writing page fulls of nonsense ready for next week’s Dazzling Digital Diary. See you then.

    New GTA IV trailer for the Xbox 360

    Friday, December 7th, 2007

    This is a nice and short blog. I love the GTA line of games, and I’m eagerly awaiting GTA IV. Xbox Live and Xbox.com will soon host a new GTA IV trailer (the third one) and I for one will download it ASAP.

    It’s a shame that the game was delayed for so long (conspiracy theorists say the Xbox 360 version was finished by the original release date, and only the PS3 version was delayed. But Take-Two/Rockstar did not want to or could not under licensing terms make GTA IV a Xbox 360 time-limited exclusive, so they pushed both release dates back to March 2008), but I think it will be worth the wait.

    Xbox 360 “Fall” Update Today

    Tuesday, December 4th, 2007

    Just a reminder that the Xbox 360 “Fall” update (that’s autumn for some of you, and spring for people here in the southern hemisphere) is available today, DivX and XviD playback included.

    I’ve been writing a new version of the Xbox 360 DivX/XviD Playback Guide, since the old version is no longer relevant. The new version basically covers the same instructions on how to get TVersity up and running to share your media files, but also adds Windows Media Player 11 instructions on how to do the same. I actually had some problems with media sharing on WMP 11 at first, because I had manually disabled the SSDP service (which is used for the UPnP service, which is itself required by the WMP media sharing service), so if you have problems with media sharing and your firewall is configured correctly, then this is where to look.

    Once the update becomes available to me (in 5 hours time, it seems), I will do some final testing and then upload the new version of the guide.

    A warning about the dashboard update, or any major update: there’s bound to be problems and new bugs so be patient. Here’s one that’s just come to light.

    Weekly News Roundup (2 December 2007)

    Sunday, December 2nd, 2007

    I can’t believe we’re in December already for 2007. Where has it all gone? I mean it seemed like it was only yesterday when I was going around from shop to shop after the Christmas rush to buy myself a Wii console, and now it’s nearly a year on (and people are still going from shop to shop trying to buy a Wii console). It’s quieter week, mainly because my mind has been elsewhere (writing the PS3 H.264 Conversion Guide), so I might have missed or not cared about a few news stories here and there. Sorry about that.

    In copyright news, Canada’s movie studio friendly government is seeking to implement even tougher copyright laws that will make the US DMCA look weak by comparison. Well that’s what happens when you elect right leaning governments – just look at what’s happening in France too with their newly elected US-loving President.

    Moving quickly onto HD news, it’s been a week of where both HD format groups are throwing stats at each other. First, the HD DVD people say that HD DVD player sales have topped 750,000 – impressive. But maybe not as impressive as Blu-ray‘s claim that they rule in Europe and during the Black Friday sales in the US. I really need to write a summary of what’s going on in the HD wars, but from the current data, it seems:

    • HD DVD sells more standalones
    • Blu-ray sells more players overall if you include the PS3
    • More HD DVD movies are sold per player
    • But Blu-ray has more movie sales overall because it has more players, even though it sells much less movies per player
    • Movie sales are generally influenced by big releases, title such as 300, Transformers, Spider-Man 3 and Ratatouille, and the more releases a side has for that week, the more sales it generates (well, duh). It does seem that Blu-ray has more “hit” releases than HD DVD at the moment

    There is finally a non-Toshiba cheap HD DVD player out on the market, not that there’s anything wrong with Toshiba players. Venturer has put out a HD DVD player based on the Toshiba A-3 for $199 – not very competitive when you look at the prices the Toshibas are selling at. I’m sure the actual store pricing will be a lot lower. While prices might not be quite competitive in the US, I’m hoping that the Venturer might come to Australia and bring prices here lower – Toshiba player prices are high here due to various reasons such as our prices being matched to European prices due to Toshiba’s corporate structure, but many of these reasons don’t apply to Venturer and Asian made players. And while not HD news strictly, many reviewers are hailing the new Pioneer “Kuro” plasma as the best TV out on the market. As an owner of a 4th generation model (the Kuro is the 8th generation model), I only have good things to say about the Pioneer plasma range. While I’m not sure about the “best in the world” rating, it’s certainly up there, although other brands such as Panasonic are not far behind. The Kuro is available in 50″ 720p, 1080p and 60″ 1080p models – if I had the money now, I would upgrade my panel to the 50″ 1080p model, 60″ if I win the lottery.

    Gaming next, and as mentioned in the intro to this piece, the Wii is the thing everybody wants this Christmas, which is funny, because it’s in the same position as last Christmas. Not wanting to sound smug or anything, but if you really wanted a Wii, why wait until the Holiday gift season to get one? I’m sure there were a few available back in June if you really wanted to get one. Wii stocks are so low that even the PS3 has managed to outsell it in Japan. It is very impressive figures for the PS3, don’t get me wrong, but if the Wii’s stock in Japan wasn’t limited to 160,000 or so, it would have killed the PS3’s 180,000 sales and probably beat every other console combined. The PS3 is doing very well due to the 40 GB lower priced model (how can I argue against that when I’m one of the people who joined in with the buying) and could top the Xbox 360, but not according to Microsoft, which Sony has come out and criticized. I will have to wait and see for the final figures before choosing to believe either side. The PS3 is also a hacker’s dream because its processor is optimized for hacking like activities. I just hope the console is locked down tight security wise, because I don’t want my PS3 to help some hacker’s attempt to hack into the Pentagon or something. And the official list of updates for the Xbox 360 “Fall” update has been released by Microsoft,  and it’s a huge list. I won’t go through everything, except to say that it looks like Microsoft have beaten Sony to the punch by getting DivX and XviD support into the console first, unless Sony releases a surprise firmware update in the next two days that is. The DivX support is quite extensive, covering all the advanced encoding features like GMC, Q-Pel and B-Frames (read our DivX Setup Guide to find out what these mean), and up to 720p resolution at 5 Mbps. And AC3 5.1 audio support, as well as MP3 support, is included too. So it looks like pretty much every DivX/XviD file out there will be supported. Will this make the 360 the most popular hardware device for viewing pirated TV show episodes? That is if we still end up having any episodes to download due to the writer strike.

    Until next week …