And people really don’t seem interested. Seriously, I remember when the Nintendo DS was launched, you had to have a preorder to get one. EB was packed when I went it to pick mine up – it looked like just another normal day in there today.
A pretty inauspicious start for the system in Australia – in a nice surprise twist, though, the Australian UMDs work in my imported US PSP. Prices are also decent – AU$22 for UMD movies, AU$65 for games. I was expecting a lot higher, considering DS games retail for about AU$80. In case you’re wondering, the system was released for AU$399. I’m pretty happy I picked mine up a month ago for AU$420, and a game for AU$50. All in all, I spent $5 to get it early – not a bad trade.
To any Aussie (and European) shriners debating over whether they’re going to spend their money on Sony’s shiny new portable, I highly recommend it – it finally feels like gaming, if you know what I mean. When I play a game on my PSP, it’s like playing a game on my PS2 – the DS still had the whole ‘mini-game’ feel to it.
I mean, gamers in Australia usually import things anyway, given that it takes forever for anything to be released there, right?
Same price and Australia though and �2 less than New Zealand.
I mean, gamers in Australia usually import things anyway, given that it takes forever for anything to be released there, right?
That could be quite a large part of it – according to Sony’s lawsuit against Hong-Kong based importer Lik-Sang, over 250 000 US and JAP PSPs have already been exported to Europe – that’s a quarter of their target sales for the launch window.