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posted by cmn32480 on Monday January 22 2018, @07:57PM   Printer-friendly
from the love-me-some-Mario-cart dept.

For years, people have predicted the pending "death" of video game consoles. Instead, video game consoles are doing better than ever.

In 2012, Wired cited mobile disruption and "the whole box-model mentality" in declaring the death of the console. Around the same time, CNN cited a "four-year tailspin" in sales for dedicated consoles (which, coincidentally, started right around the same time as the global financial crisis) to explain "why console gaming is dying."

And IGN, in its own 2012 look at the fate of the console market, offered a bold prediction for the fate of the PS4 months before it was even officially announced: "A better-graphics box at $400? Not going to work."

Today, those and many other relatively recent predictions of doom for the console market look downright silly. The industry analysts at NPD announced last night that the US video game market grew 11 percent in 2017 to $3.3 billion. The reason? "Video game hardware [meaning consoles] was the primary driver of overall growth," as hardware was up 27 percent for the year, to $1.27 billion.

The launch of the Nintendo Switch was a huge part of this increase, of course. We already knew that the system has been selling at a rapid clip that reportedly outpaced even Nintendo's expectations worldwide. In the US, though, "on a time-aligned basis through the first ten months on the market, Nintendo Switch has sold more consoles than any other platform in history," NPD says.

But the Switch isn't the only console success story these days. As NPD notes, "combined sales of PlayStation 4 and Xbox One continue on a record-setting pace" in the US. Together, those "high-end" consoles are selling 18 percent better than the PS3 and Xbox 360 did at the same point in their lifecycles and four percent better than the PS2/Xbox generation.


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  • (Score: 2) by crafoo on Tuesday January 23 2018, @05:42AM (1 child)

    by crafoo (6639) on Tuesday January 23 2018, @05:42AM (#626427)

    Japan is not the USA. Japan is a pretty good case for a unified culture and a vision of race and racial solidarity as a strength. Pretty much the opposite of "diversity is our strength" mantra you hear in the USA. It's also a honor culture and not a shame-based culture (Judo-Christan).

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 23 2018, @08:41AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 23 2018, @08:41AM (#626464)

    Uh. Japan has a far more shame based culture than countries with "Judo-Christan" culture - which is more a guilt culture (but with Christianity you confess your sins and whoopee you're clean- you might still have lingering feelings of guilt but that's mainly up to you).

    http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/08/opinion/08iht-edazimi.html [nytimes.com]
    http://awshamecultureinjapan.blogspot.my/ [blogspot.my]
    See also: https://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/15/opinion/the-shame-culture.html [nytimes.com]

    In a guilt culture you know you are good or bad by what your conscience feels. In a shame culture you know you are good or bad by what your community says about you, by whether it honors or excludes you. In a guilt culture people sometimes feel they do bad things; in a shame culture social exclusion makes people feel they are bad.

    There's plenty of pressure to conform in Japan (the nail that sticks out gets hammered down) and if you don't you are shamed, ostracized or even bullied: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/oct/27/japanese-student-sues-over-schools-order-to-dye-hair-black [theguardian.com]