Friday, February 5, 2010

The Playstation Network: Sony's VP of marketing talks.

This is just a couple excerpts from the interview, but I think it addresses two big questions in relation to the PlayStation Network. 

Sony's VP of marketing, Peter Dille, responded to a question about the PlayStation Network by saying that the company is considering charging for the service. He said, "It's been our philosophy not to charge for it from launch up until now, but Kaz recently went on the record as saying that's something we're looking at. I can confirm that as well. That's something that we're actively thinking about. What's the best way to approach that if we were to do that? You know, no announcements at this point in time, but it's something we're thinking about."

IGN: One of the questions our readers really wanted to ask was, why can't we download more PS1 and especially PS2 games on PSN?

Peter Dille: It's a great question. We're working really hard on it. We're pushing the third-party community and evangelizing this as a terrific opportunity both commercially as well as from a brand perspective to keep people interested in some of these older IPs [intellectual properties]. Final Fantasy VIII was the top downloaded game in December -- a real testament to your readers' questions, you know, that this stuff has an audience. From our side, we're going through our own studio organization and trying to make sure all these old games are out there so that we can lead by example, but we're also communicating with all the third-parties about the success of the Final Fantasy games, and other PS1 and PS2 classics. By all means, I think people can look for more of that because once the third-parties see how this works, it's just found money. There's not a whole lot of work that has to go into it and once we can get it up on the network, it finds an audience pretty quickly.

Full Interview

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Purchasing memory cards is such a chore... You have to search online for prices, filter through which ones are genuine, go out to a bunch of shops,compare prices, finally buy your memory, and then fervently pray that the price doesn't fall in the next month or so.

I've been done in by rapid price drops in the past... especially this one time when I bought a Micro SD card for my R4 gaming flash card at what I mistakenly assumed was a steal, only to later see that it fell by $5 in a week.

(Posted using OperaV2 for R4i Nintendo DS.)