One thing is for certain. And that is people have underestimated the impact of the PS3. While its numbers may not match up to the Xbox 360 or the Wii (I didn't verify this, just for argument sakes), the PS3 is, however, the number one selling Blu-Ray player. It may have costed Sony some gaming market share but the PS3 allowed Sony to stay ahead in the format war. Everytime Toshiba sold its players at discount, Sony responded with incredible savings on their titles. All the techies will tell you that Blu-Ray discs are more expensive to produce than HD DVD (true), yet we seen these discs sell for $10 a piece, a price point that I haven't even seen on the HD DVD side.
It doesn't matter how cheap the HD DVD players sell for. Studios will look at software sales. They don't care what the PS3 cost or what the Toshiba players cost. They care about if their titles move off the shelf. The longer that Blu-Ray remains ahead, the more confidence studios have in Sony's format. Winning studio support is the key to winning this war. This Christmas lineup is only going to get uglier for the HD DVD camp.
It doesn't matter how cheap the HD DVD players sell for. Studios will look at software sales. They don't care what the PS3 cost or what the Toshiba players cost. They care about if their titles move off the shelf. The longer that Blu-Ray remains ahead, the more confidence studios have in Sony's format. Winning studio support is the key to winning this war. This Christmas lineup is only going to get uglier for the HD DVD camp.