http://uk.ps3.ign.com/articles/101/1015007p1.htmlFor the most part, this is very good news indeed for Sonyfriends. I imagine that Sony's poor performance against the Xbox 360 in the US will pick up strongly, especially if the console is made compatible with PS2 games.
Now here's where I start b*tching.
See the prices? ¥29,980, $299. Seems reasonable; in fact, the US is getting a rather good deal. Now, let's move on. €299. What the f*ck?
Last time I checked, it was €0.7074 to the dollar. So the price for the Eurozone should be €212. Maybe €220. Maybe even €250 if they're going for really significant figures. There is no mention of the UK price, but I wouldn't be surprised if it's £299. Based on the US price, it should be £180. Maybe £199 if they want to take advantage of the nearest psychologically significant figure. But I'd be surprised if we get it for £249. It often seems that the pricing policy works like this:
1.Set Japanese price
2. Convert yen to dollars then round up/down to nearest psychologically significant figure for US price
3. Convert dollars to euro and round up (always up) to get Eurozone price
4. Convert euro to pounds and round up (always up) to get British price
5. ????
6. PROFIT!
Apparently, things are even worse in Australia. I'd really like to know why this happens. Are there some enormous costs that exist when selling in Europe (especially the UK) that don't exist when selling in the US? Or are the companies just being arseholes?