
The state of Xbox in Japan
Are we seeing the start of an Xbox renaissance in Japan?

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The state of Xbox in Japan
Are we seeing the start of an Xbox renaissance in Japan?www.windowscentral.com
Even if that was the case, the Xbox is doing very well. Remember, the Xbox One could have been selling like the Series is but did not. Microsoft could have been shipping the same amount of Xbox Ones to the region, and the systems could have been exported out of the country the entire time. That is part of the reason I don't buy that in the case of the Xbox, most of them are being shipped out of the country, as people are saying is the case with the PlayStation.I wonder how much of that data was skewed by exports to other regions where Xbox is still unsupported. For example, the cheapest Xbox series in my region comes from Japan. Same with oculus quest
Even if that was the case, the Xbox is doing very well. Remember, the Xbox One could have been selling like the Series is but did not. Microsoft could have been shipping the same amount of Xbox Ones to the region, and the systems could have been exported out of the country the entire time. That is part of the reason I don't buy that in the case of the Xbox, most of them are being shipped out of the country, as people are saying is the case with the PlayStation.
They are supply restricted but they are closing to OG Xbox level and potentially Xbox 360 slightly further down the road. If it is not renaissance, I don't know what it is then lolConsidering it's still selling considerably worse than the Xbox and X360, I wouldn't exactly call it the start of a renaissance
They are supply restricted but they are closing to OG Xbox level and potentially Xbox 360 slightly further down the road. If it is not renaissance, I don't know what it is then lol
Uh, it's not even close and it's been about 1.75 years since launch. 1.75 years and it's at almost 175k versus roughly 400k for OG Xbox.
while the Xbox Series has sold just 232,000 units
You're using OLD data. Xbox Series consoles is over 232K in Japan sales. Data from 2022-06 IGN using Famitsu data @ https://www.ign.com/articles/xbox-series-xs-outselling-ps5-in-japan
Star Ocean 6
You can catch imagination if the consoles are lying on the shelves and nobody is buying them. So far there is nno indication that this happens.Of course, to be fair there's also a chance that sales could potentially increase if something catches the imagination of Japanese gamers or if they find Game Pass such great value that it's worth getting one.
The global recession could actually boost xbox in Japan. 5nm series s with its lower ram would still allow for lower prices than the ps5/xbox series x. Couple it with the value of game pass and MS could have a really good hand. That's without accounting for the fact that a 5nm series s should allow it to be even smaller and consume even less power.Considering it's still selling considerably worse than the Xbox and X360, I wouldn't exactly call it the start of a renaissance.
We'd have to see a significant uptick for it to become a major player in the Japanese market. Unfortunately, there's a possibility of a global recession on the horizon that could make the one back in 2008 seem cute. If that happens then it goes from a miniscule possibility to a dead possibility.
Even if that doesn't happen, the strength of the dollar versus the yen has climbed drastically (approx. +18%) since Feb. as well as YoY (approx. +27% YoY), if that trend continues it'll become increasingly difficult for MS to compete in Japan.
Global uncertainty about conditions in Europe (War in Ukraine) and Asia-Pacific (China's intentions in the area) are combining to make the dollar seem like the safest global currency at the moment. Great if you are in the US and want to buy foreign goods. Not so great if you are in a foreign country and want to buy US goods.
Or another way to think of it. Great for foreign countries that want to sell product to the US. Not so great for US companies that want to sell product to other countries. One of the reasons that Japan's economy exploded in the 80's was because of how strong the dollar was to the Yen (1 dollar would get you almost 240 Yen). One contributing factor to their economy slowing quite significantly in the 90's was because of how strong the Yen became (1 dollar could get you a bit over 100 Yen and dipped down as low as ~94 Yen back in 1995).
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SB
I've not seen anything that would suggest moving from TSMC's best 7nm process to 5nm would result in significant power and thermals savings and Microsoft will be paying through the nose for a more expensive process. If Microsoft want to sell Series S cheaper, it would cost them less to take a bigger hit on he console.The global recession could actually boost xbox in Japan. 5nm series s with its lower ram would still allow for lower prices than the ps5/xbox series x. Couple it with the value of game pass and MS could have a really good hand. That's without accounting for the fact that a 5nm series s should allow it to be even smaller and consume even less power.
I've not seen anything that would suggest moving from TSMC's best 7nm process to 5nm would result in significant power and thermals savings and Microsoft will be paying through the nose for a more expensive process. If Microsoft want to sell Series S cheaper, it would cost them less to take a bigger hit on he console.
I haven't seen anything to suggest moving from 7nm to 5nm wouldn't result in power and thermal savings. Have you seen anything that would suggest that? MS would also be able to produce a lot more chips per wafer. 5nm wont stay expensive forever.
Yeah, mostly from Apple who are the only people can to afford these prices in volume. What Apple's products taught us, was that changing one chip, the APU/SOC - from 7nm to 5nm didn't actually result in massive thermal changes. It allows performance to push up and battery life to eek out but nothing got materially smaller and neither are useful for Series S rev.2.
TSMC are focussing on N3 right now, with some tail improvements to the old processes (e.g. N4P), but N5 is still the most expensive commercial process and that's not going to change whilst the semiconductor shortage continues and TSMC expect that to run a few more years.
It remains to be seen what an xbox series s soc would do on 5nm. Remember Apple launched chips on 5nm 2 years ago. We also don't know what their main focus was when moving from 7-5nm.
WE already see AMD going from 7nm to 6nm netting larger / higher clocked apus in the same power profiles. Taking the series s chip design and moving from 7nm to 5nm while keeping clock speeds and core/cu counts the same should result in a much smaller and lower power consuming chip.