MS is obviously trying to rebuild their own momentum at the expense of Sony's.
At very high level, Sony has expected developers to go multiplatform. This is why they invested in first party studios from the get go. However, I feel that, mentally and psychologically, they are not very well prepared and even half hearted about their "go alone" effort. As in... they lack the true sense of urgency to upkeep their performance level
as if there is no 3rd party exclusives. Granted, they have demonstrated marked improvement during the last few months. But there are a few key issues they need to deal with:
* Profitability vs marketshare. Make up their mind and prepare for the worst consequences. It seems that they made up their mind but are unprepared for the likely outcomes when competing against MS.
* Focus, and deliver services end-to-end from consumers' point of view. I don't know why "Life with Playstation" was announced at all. After focusing Home on the gaming experience, they should throw even more weight behind Home (to help build 3rd party content) instead of starting yet another information service.
PSP is another example. The new video store is yet another one. They have started too many shallow projects because perhaps these are started by different units but they are inter-related to each other. Engineering may become a bottleneck as a result. It's a problem with management, not necessarily engineering.
* Redefining PS3 with new experience (e.g., Game 3.0, Home, PS Eye) as opposed to relying on familiar franchises. There are MUCH challenges but they should expand and finish what they started, keep us posted, or kill them right away. e.g., What happened to PS Eye ? Why is SingStar gimped ? Can real guitars be used for Guitar Heroes using Cell ? Only Sony knows.
Other than these, I don't really mind FF going multiplatform. It's great for consumers and hopefully, new FF experiences. It also exposes Sony's weaknesses rather well (and I am happy coz I have been complaining about these deficiencies). Hopefully, they move/regroup to accelerate their momentum. Once they fixed these shortfalls, I sincerely believe that they will become a new force to be reckoned with.
To me, the multi-platform event was an unpluggable hole long known. It's called the inconvenient future as long as MS is willing to throw money
while Sony's user base is not "big enough" to sustain risky development yet.