Morgoth, on 10 June 2013 - 12:04 PM, said:
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Yes, it's called a *PC*. They've been around for a couple of decades and are still far and away ahead of any game-console-media-box-hybrid. >.> Which brings me back to the point that buying an Xbox One will have but one (lol) advantage over buying a PC - the stable development platform angle. That's it. And that is vastly outweighed (imo) by the DRM and similar initiatives they're bringing in to it.
This here shows that you simply do not understand how most people view these things. You are a tiny tiny part of the market as am I. The people who spend money, serious money, on televisions surround systems and dvd players, are people like my dad - and I'm guessing; your dad - who wouldn't even entertain the thought of buying a computer to function as the heart of all their multimedia connected needs. Shit, I'm not sure if I could be bothered.
They want you to buy the x1 too, and I'm guessing a large portion of gamers will, but we're not the true focus. It's all those other people. The vast majority.
I realise this PC thing is important to you, I have friends who're computer engineers and it's important to them too, but it's a little silly to assume that what's important to you is important to all. Most people don't even like PCs and certainly don't want anything that complicates their use of PCs in the slightest.
My point is that the lack of understanding of PCs has nothing to do with them being PCs - and Xbox or a PS3 IS A PC, they just run a different OS and in the case of the Xbox One, guess what, it's running a version of Windows 8. The only reason people "don't like PCs" and don't understand them enough to realize that sticking one via HDMI cable onto their TV is a 3-second operation is through (wilful) ignorance.
And frankly, my dad wouldn't EVER buy a *gaming console*, not even one cleverly marketed as a media hub, to be the heart of his entertainment system. He wouldn't use a PC, either, but they're of a level for that kind of thing - he would buy a blu-ray player or a DVD player and a Freeview box/Sky box if he wanted pay-TV, and that would cover that.
The thing is, the only reason the PC thing is a sticking point for me is because the Xbox One is now a PC with built-in DRM and a non-upgradeable 500GB HDD, running a version of the stupid Windows 8 OS and comes with a TV function in it. At the moment I don't even have a desktop PC - I have a laptop, and that's it. I own an Xbox. I'll probably end up owning a PS4. That doesn't change the fact that the Xbox One is a bad device, and a stupid attempt at pushing in on a broader market when, news flash, it's the successor to a
games console. You can go on about how people use them as Netflix boxes all you want but that is NOT how the Xbox or Xbox 360 was designed, marketed, or sold. That was a feature added YEARS after release which people who
already owned an Xbox took advantage of and a few people got a two-for-one out of. Unless you can show me the sales figures which took a massive upswing after the Xbox started being able to stream Netflix (protip, there wasn't one; 360 sales have been trending downwards, sufficient for the PS3 to catch up) I'm not buying your "everybody buys Xboxes to do what their Netflix box already does for much less money" line.
Is M$ trying to capitalize on that aspect of their product's functionality? Sure. But that doesn't make it the key aspect - just the latest one
with room for growth. The gaming market is divided down the PC/Xbox/PlayStation/Nintendo lines and is a relatively inflexible area for them. That doesn't mean it's not an important area, or a key area, even, it just means it's not something they can GROW. While TV/media is - because it's something that isn't that huge for them...
yet.
At the end of the day, however, if M$ want to drive AWAY their gamer market, either to Sony or to PC (bear in mind, while I continually point out that PC is in fact a better version of what the consoles are, I still think Sony, if they don't do what M$ is doing, are a great choice) then that's up to them. Because if they do, I can guarantee you that the few million additional sales they get because of Netflix will not make up for that loss.
In short - I know exactly the market M$ is aiming to grow with this. That market consists of people who have never realized what a PC is, what it can do, or why a console is just a limited version of one. HOWEVER, that is irrelevant to the fact that M$ has assumed their existing market (that is; gamers) will stay with them, while doing everything in their power to make Xbox One the less desirable console out of the two next-gen contenders, and has simultaneously made the distinction between PCs and their console a moot point - which is stupid in and of itself, and something more people should be aware of.
For better or for worse, M$ is gunning for the mass market. Personally I doubt that will work precisely *because* people like my dad are not going to waste their money on something that will function as a vague "media hub" for their entertainment system when they already have those set up, and were they to redo it, could do it considerably cheaper without paying for the gaming console (because guess what, that is still what the mainstream will view it as). This is why Sony has the upper hand right now. Well, that, and no intrusive DRM practices, leaving their console (for the moment) the clear choice for anyone who wants to 1) Play games 2) watch movies 3) browse the net and 4) doesn't want to do the above on a PC.