Undercover Cop
Newcomer
Let's paint a best case (though completely unrealistic) scenario for the PS3 to reach mass market price. Suppose Sony will be extremely aggressive with its price drops (since the competition will be doing the same or making killer bundles)? If so, then we can expect a $100 price drop every year (just before Christmas).
This means that:
Christmas 2006 - $599 US dollars.
Christmas 2007 - $499 US dollars.
Christmas 2008 - $399 US dollars.
Christmas 2009 - $299 US dollars.
Christmas 2010 - $199 US dollars.
Christmas 2011 - $99 US dollars.
By the year 2010 we would have already been looking towards the NEXT generation. In fact forget about looking forward that far, do you think people will hold out that long while the 360 and Wii are available alternatives? It took years for even the PS2 to drop to mass market price of under $200 dollars, where it made its most sales.
(Hell, we can even look at this another way. Lets compare this with the PS2 pricing, it launch at $299 and it currently at $129 six years later. That mean that even if the PS3 would follow the same rate of depreciation (56.6% over 6 years) it would be at a lovely $260 by the year 2012. Thats still ten more bucks than the Wii is today.)
And that's the best case scenario: we all know the PS3 won't be following these paths. It's already losing nearly $250 with every unit sold, with very costly and complicated hardware components. It's going to stay expensive for a VERY long time. Damn Sony is in for some hurt.
This means that:
Christmas 2006 - $599 US dollars.
Christmas 2007 - $499 US dollars.
Christmas 2008 - $399 US dollars.
Christmas 2009 - $299 US dollars.
Christmas 2010 - $199 US dollars.
Christmas 2011 - $99 US dollars.
By the year 2010 we would have already been looking towards the NEXT generation. In fact forget about looking forward that far, do you think people will hold out that long while the 360 and Wii are available alternatives? It took years for even the PS2 to drop to mass market price of under $200 dollars, where it made its most sales.
(Hell, we can even look at this another way. Lets compare this with the PS2 pricing, it launch at $299 and it currently at $129 six years later. That mean that even if the PS3 would follow the same rate of depreciation (56.6% over 6 years) it would be at a lovely $260 by the year 2012. Thats still ten more bucks than the Wii is today.)
And that's the best case scenario: we all know the PS3 won't be following these paths. It's already losing nearly $250 with every unit sold, with very costly and complicated hardware components. It's going to stay expensive for a VERY long time. Damn Sony is in for some hurt.