A place called Disc Replay. It's a small chain in Illinois that resells music/movies/games.
One thing about this particular store is that they outright refuse to sell anything Sega. I went in there a few months ago looking for a DreamCast and didn't see one so I asked the cashier who told me about their "no sega" policy. Apparently it's due to the store owner.
Heh! Nice website. They never finished filling in the default names in whatever template they used. I went there to see if there was a reason for their "No Sega" policy. Can you find out for us? It's going to kill me. Do they carry games made by Sega for other consoles (e.g. Sonic for GC or Panzer Dragoon Orta for Xbox)?
Anyway, I was reading this thread... well I kind of skimmed all the Plasma TV talk... and thought I should chime in about these "expectations" of the PS3.
I wanted a PS3 when it was announced. But the one thing that changed my mind and also may cause Sony to lose its foothold in the number one spot:
It's too expensive!Speaking only for myself, I'm tired of video game systems trying to make their machines a replacement for every piece of equipment in my home entertainment center. I never asked for a Blu-Ray player. I just wanted to play new games. But Sony is using their new machine as a Trojan Horse in a new "format battle" and it may end up biting them in the behind. Who wants to watch Blu-Rays on the PS3 anyway, when we all learned that the PS2 was hardly competent in playing regular DVDs? It's a nice extra, granted, but one that's inflating the machine to ridiculous prices. And judging from the past, I don't see any drastic price drops anytime soon.
(By the way, I'm aware of the irony of pointing out the expense of a game system when we spend hundreds if not thousands of dollars to recreate 20 year old arcade game cabinets. Then again, I am trying to assume the role of the average consumer - one who doesn't build arcade cabinets.)
Secondly, I must be the only guy in the world who no longer cares about graphics. Seriously - it hit a point last generation where I looked at the screen and said, "good enough" and focused squarely on the gameplay. I don't care how good Motor Storm looks in 1080p or 720p or whatever, because, at the end of the day, I'll bet any amount of money that I'd have more fun with a time-tested classic like Super Mario Bros. or... what the heck, Mr. Driller on a standard television with rabbit ears and knobs.
The PS2 outsold all the next-gen consoles this past holiday, which is a good sign of what really sells a game system... and it's not graphics.
Personally, and not speaking as a fanboy, I'm rooting for Nintendo. They were complete jerks during their heyday with their stranglehold on 3rd party companies and unfair tactics of bullying retailers (among other offenses). But I'll be damned if a decent percentage of the games on the NES weren't a blast to play! I really don't care how "kiddie" they are - fun is fun and that's that. (As an aside: I finally motivated myself to finish Metroid Prime and I must say that it was one of the best gaming experiences I've ever had. Definitely not "kiddee", even if it doesn't invlove punching hookers.)
The Wii will succeed, in my opinion, because they've targeted very real people with very real money - the non-gamer. My girlfriend thinks not-so-highly of video games but she's the one who always wants to break out Wii Sports. And there are already a few good games worth picking up for the system - par for course for any new system (I don't ever remember PS2 or XBox having nothing but gold coming out of the gate - just one or two "must-haves").
By the way, I'm not ruling out buying a PS3 (with some unlikely price drop or off the back of a truck). It's just at this point, having a limited selection of titles is easier to swallow with a $250 price tag than it is with a $600 one.
Rant over... I'll go back to my dark, quiet corner.