Friday, July 13, 2007

Microsoft holds firm on Xbox 360 pricing














Microsoft on Tuesday said it will hold firm on pricing for its Xbox
360 game console, defying widespread expectations that it would respond
to a price cut by rival Sony for the PlayStation 3.


Instead, Microsoft voiced confidence that a slate of upcoming titles
targeting both hard-core and casual gamers would be strong enough to
give it the lion's share of consumer dollars in the coming months.


"We have no desire, no need, to react to anything the competition has done," Shane Kim, head of Microsoft Game Studios, said in an interview.


"We feel really great about the Xbox 360 momentum right now. Customers are voting with their wallets; it's not just about console units. We feel great about how we're doing."


On Monday, Sony cut the price of the PlayStation 3, which competes against the Xbox 360, by $100, or 17 percent, in the United States in an effort to boost flagging sales.


That means the machine, which has a 60-gigabyte hard drive and a
Blu-ray high-definition DVD player, costs $500, or $20 more than the
high-end Xbox 360 Elite that has a 120-gigabyte hard drive but no built-in high-definition DVD player.


Microsoft also has a "premium" Xbox 360 with a 20-gigabyte hard drive
that sells for $400, and a "core" version with no hard drive that costs
$300.

Sony's cut also came days after Microsoft said the number of
broken Xbox 360s was "unacceptable" and that it would book a charge of
up to $1.15 billion for repairs and warranty extensions.


Microsoft also said it had shipped 11.6 million consoles worldwide by the end of June, missing its target of 12 million.


In the United States, Microsoft has sold about 5.8 million consoles, compared to 2.8 million for Nintendo's Wii and 1.4 million for the PS3, according to data from NPD Group.


Kim said the decision not to cut prices was unrelated to Microsoft's
goal of making the Xbox business profitable in its 2008 fiscal year,
which just started.

Since launching the original Xbox in late 2001, Microsoft
has spent billions of dollars fighting Sony's dominance in the industry
yet has shown little, if any, profit.

"It's really not about meeting the profitability goals. We
feel very confident that we'll meet the profit goals with our strategy
that is already in place," Kim said.


Kim pointed to a lineup of games coming out later this year, including Microsoft's highly anticipated Halo 3, Grand Theft Auto IV from Take-Two Interactive Software and Madden NFL 08 from Electronic Arts.


"This year, that perfect storm arrives again," Kim said. "And the Xbox
360 is the only platform you'll be able to play all three of those
titles on."








Microsoft also hopes to attract more casual gamers with two new casual
games for later this year. One is a multiplayer "party game" based on
its "Viva Pinata" franchise, and the other is based on the movie trivia board game "Scene It?"


Nintendo's Wii has outsold the Xbox 360 and PS3 this year due to a design and price aimed at drawing in casual gamers.


Kim also said the Xbox Live online service, which allows players to
compete online and download movies and games, had 7 million users and
would expand to 10 million in one year. He said Walt Disney would start
making some of its movies available on the service.


"Xbox Live continues to just be a huge boulder rolling downhill that is gathering momentum," Kim said.


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Distributed by Hasan Shrek, independence blogger. Also run online business ,internet marketing solution , online store script .
Beside he is  writing some others blogs for notebook computer , computer training , computer software and personal computer

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