Playstation 3 review by The New York Times - It ain't pretty.

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A Weekend Full of Quality Time With PlayStation 3

Howard Stringer, you have a problem. Your company’s new video game system just isn’t that great.

Ever since Mr. Stringer took the helm last year at Sony, the struggling if still formidable electronics giant, the world has been hearing about how the coming PlayStation 3 would save the company, or at least revitalize it. Even after Microsoft took the lead in the video-game wars a year ago with its innovative and powerful Xbox 360, Sony blithely insisted that the PS3 would leapfrog all competition to deliver an unsurpassed level of fun.

Put bluntly, Sony has failed to deliver on that promise.

Measured in megaflops, gigabytes and other technical benchmarks, the PlayStation 3 is certainly the world’s most powerful game console. It falls far short, however, of providing the world’s most engaging overall entertainment experience. There is a big difference, and Sony seems to have confused one for the other.

The PS3, which was introduced in North America on Friday with a hefty $599 price tag for
the top version, certainly delivers gorgeous graphics. But they are not discernibly prettier than the Xbox 360’s. More important, the whole PlayStation 3 system is surprisingly clunky to use and simply does not provide many basic functions that users have come to expect, especially online.

I have spent more than 30 hours using the PlayStation 3 over the last week or so and may have played more different games on the system — 13 — than probably anyone outside of Sony itself. Sony did not activate the PS3’s online service until just before the Friday debut. Over the weekend a clear sense of disappointment with the PlayStation 3 emerged from many gamers.

“What’s weird is that the PS3 was originally supposed to come out in the spring, and here it came out in the fall, and it still doesn’t feel finished,” Christopher Grant, managing editor of Joystiq, one of the world’s biggest video-game blogs, said on the telephone Saturday night. “It’s really not the all-star showing they should have had at launch. Sony is playing catch-up in a lot of ways now, not just in terms of sales but in terms of the basic functionality and usability of the system.”

Sadly for Sony, the best way to explain how the PlayStation 3 falls short is to explain how different it is to use than its main competition, Xbox 360. When I reviewed the 360 last year, I wrote: “Twelve minutes after opening the box, I had created my nickname, was in a game of Quake 4 and thought, ‘This can’t be this easy.’ ”

I never felt that way using the PlayStation 3. With the PS3, 12 minutes after opening the box I realized that Sony inexplicably does not include cables to connect the machine to a high-definition television. Keep in mind that one of Sony’s main selling points has been that the PS3 plays Blu-Ray high-definition movie discs. But high-definiton cables? Sold separately. The Xbox 360, by contrast, ships with one cable that can connect to either a standard or high-definition set.

Then, before you are even using the PS3, you have to connect the “wireless” controller to the base unit with a USB cable so they can recognize each other. If you bring your PS3 controller to a friend’s house, you’ll have to plug back in again. The 360’s wireless controllers are always just that, wireless.

If there is one thing one would expect Sony to get perfect, though, it would be music. Wrong. Sure, you can plug in your digital music player and the PS3 will play the tunes. But as soon as you go into a game, the music stops. By contrast, one of the things I’ve always enjoyed most on the Xbox 360 is being able to listen to my own music while playing Pebble Beach or driving my virtual Ferrari. Doesn’t seem too complicated, but the PS3 can’t do it.

In that sense it often feels as if the PlayStation 3 can’t walk and chew bubble gum at the same time. In the PS3’s online store (which feels like a slow Web page) you can access movie trailers and trial versions of new games, but when you actually download the 600-megabyte files, you’ll be stuck watching a progress bar crawl across the screen for 20 or 40 minutes. Astonishingly, you can’t download in the background while you go do something that’s more fun (like play a game). On the Xbox 360, not only are files downloaded seamlessly in the background, but you can also shut off the machine, turn it on later, and the download will resume automatically.

The PS3’s whole online experience feels tacked-on and unpolished. On the Xbox 360 each user has a single unified friends list, so you can track your friends and communicate with them easily, no matter what game you are in. On the PlayStation 3 most games have their own separate friends list and some have no friends function at all. There is a master list as well, but in order to communicate with anyone on it, you have to quit the game you are playing.

There are some high points. The multi-player battles in Resistance: Fall of Man are excellent. The arcade-style action in the downloadable Blast Factor is suitably frantic.
But the list of the PS3’s disappointments remains, from its undersupported voice chat to its maddening cellphone-like text messaging system. (In frustration I ended up plugging in a USB keyboard.) Overall, Sony seems to have put a lot of effort into cramming as much silicon horsepower under the hood as possible but to have forgotten that all the transistors in the world can’t make someone smile.

And so it is a bit of a shock to realize that on the video game front Microsoft and Sony are moving in exactly the opposite directions one might expect given their roots. Microsoft, the prototypical PC company, has made the Xbox 360 into a powerful but intuitive, welcoming, people-friendly system. Sony’s PlayStation 3, on the other hand, often feels like a brawny but somewhat recalcitrant specialized computer. (Sony is even telling users to wait for future software patches to fix some of the PS3’s deficiencies.)

The thing is, if people want to use a computer, they’ll use a computer.

Through the decades of the Walkman and the Trinitron television, Sony was renowned as the global master of easy-to-use, seamlessly powerful consumer electronics. But recently Sony seems to have lost its way, first in digital music players, in which it ceded the ergonomic high ground to Apple’s iPod, and now in home-game consoles. For now Sony’s technologists seem to have won out over the people who study fun.

As a practical matter, given the limited quantities Sony has been able to manufacture, the PlayStation 3 will surely remain sold out throughout the holiday season. If you can’t find one, don’t fret. Sony still has a lot of work to do. As Mr. Grant of Joystiq put it: “Maybe in six months it’ll be finished. Maybe by next fall I’ll be able to do all the cool stuff. I’m still kind of waiting.”

 
DANG IT BLAS!

I was just about to post that! :cmad:

Great minds think alike :O
 
Of course!

einstein-tongue.gif
 
It's a real good article, with real good points.

No HD Cables in box :down
No Custom Soundtracks :down
No Background Downloads :down
Separate Friends Lists per game :down

Sony went for all power and brawn, but not enough brains and innovation.
 
It wouldn't have hurt Sony to wait six months and release it, so they could manufacture more units, and incorporate more features to copy the 360 more :o
 
^ but firmware updates could change that.
 
Well, they needed to release 600,000 more here to have a chance :o
 
Ice-man said:
^ but firmware updates could change that.

I guess Sony had piss off their fan base in their mind while making this thing it does not change the fact that obviously the PS3 was not completely ready & Sony FAILED TO DELIVER
 
but they didnt fail... there actualy doing good so far, based on fans comments on some sites, only like 5% of the consoles have defects and minor ones.

soo it will all be fixed, and sony will once again be back on top.
 
LOL, is there anyone who takes the New York Slimes seriously anymore? :D
 
Gammy79 said:
Even after Microsoft took the lead in the video-game wars a year ago
The 360 didn't take the lead. It still hasn't.
 
As much as I love New York, I hate to admit that most New Yorkers aren't the brightest.
 
Avalanche said:
The 360 didn't take the lead. It still hasn't.

I think he meant the next gen race. Last I heard, 360's had sold 5 million, and thats in July. It's not a one horse race, but that's quite a head start.
 
Decent article and good. For the record in terms of local newspapers the New York Times is probably the best in the country (albeit you could make a good argument for The Washington Post).
 
P.S. The numbers:

Roughly 7.35 million Xbox 360s sold.

Roughly 700,000 Wiis sold.

Less than 300,000 PS3s sold.

So numbers wise they are on the short end of the stick. And if PS2 beating Xbox taught Sony anything, building a library and some respect a year earlier than the competition GOES a long way. Go figure Sony now makes the exact same mistake then.
 
DACrowe said:
Decent article and good. For the record in terms of local newspapers the New York Times is probably the best in the country (albeit you could make a good argument for The Washington Post).

Washington Compost is maybe even worse than the NY Slimes.
 
Horrorfan said:
I think he meant the next gen race. Last I heard, 360's had sold 5 million, and thats in July. It's not a one horse race, but that's quite a head start.

5 million units sold? Worldwide? I wonder how inflated those numbers are.
 
DACrowe said:
P.S. The numbers:

Roughly 7.35 million Xbox 360s sold.

Roughly 700,000 Wiis sold.

Less than 300,000 PS3s sold.

So numbers wise they are on the short end of the stick. And if PS2 beating Xbox taught Sony anything, building a library and some respect a year earlier than the competition GOES a long way. Go figure Sony now makes the exact same mistake then.

The system has been out for what, 3 days? Every unit sold out is a good thing, however I personally wish that they had waited to release it a few months and have taken the time to build up some stock of them for the consumers.

I played the system last Friday and I thought it was great. Graphics are very smooth and full, the color was top notch and the game I played (some racing game) was fun. I wouln't pay 600 for this or ANY other sytem however of every sytem available right now I think this one has the bigger upside.
 
Start comparing numbers monthly, not daily. :o
 
farmerfran said:
Start comparing numbers monthly, not daily. :o

What I was getting at Fran is some are saying the PS3 will not be abig seller and not make it, however it has only been out 3 days and was short shipped. It is WAY early to think ill of the PS3.

I was not making a number comparison at all.
 
Beautifully crafted article. Anyone who denies the authenticity of the problems brought up, and the fact that Sony's PS3 = power without brains, needs to really find a new hobby.

New York Times or not, they addressed issues in such an eloquent way that you could only dream to be able to make your mind function at such a level. :o
 

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