Hey there, budget-conscious gamers: the Vii didn’t quite pan out the way we’d all hoped, but we just want you to know you still don’t have to spend $500 or wait for a PS3 Slim to hit the shelves to have a gaming experience worthy of 2008. Just pick Sonilex — it’s a fraction of the size of the PS3, and at around 32
bucks even the most stingy gamer can splurge for it. Word is 41 “NES games” have been released for Sonilex this year alone (probably piled into that odd-looking cart on the left there), including, incredibly but really, the unauthorized NES port of “Tekken.” After all, the game cart says “2008″ on it so you know you’re getting the absolute cutting edge of NES games — like, ones that were never even released until just now, okay? No word on Blu-ray though. That’s a deal-breaker if you ask us.
Sonilex is slimmer than the PS3 and like, totally plays Tekken
23 OctAnalyst calls for Xmas PS3 price cut
8 OctPotential buyers are plumping for cheaper Xbox 360
Sony is feeling the pinch in the US following Microsoft’s recent spate of Xbox 360 price slashing and needs to reduce the cost of PlayStation 3 before Xmas 2008, according to latest analyst reports.
EDAAR analyst Jesse Divnich claims that the PS3 is “too steep” in price for a mainstream market, urging “Sony to consider a possible hardware price cut this holiday season.”
“We should note that if Microsoft’s first-party titles perform significantly better in quality and popularity than Sony’s this holiday season, we could begin to see a considerable amount of potential PS3 owners, who may be waiting for a PS3 price cut, to choose the Xbox 360 over the PS3.”
Xmas of war
Divnich goes on to predict that Epic’s Gears of War 2 (exclusively developed for Microsoft’s Xbox 360) will be the biggest selling game in the US this coming Christmas holiday season. 
While the Microsoft Xbox 360 Arcade system now costs under $200 in the US, the PlayStation 3 cost of $399 over in the States “is simply too steep to entice the casual and mainstream markets, regardless of how great Resistance 2 and LittleBigPlanet may be,” adds the analyst.
Casual surge
Divnich estimates that there were 320,000 Xbox 360s sold in September in the US compared with 215,000 PlayStation 3, but also notes that “if September hardware sales fall below our estimate (under 200,000 units), it could be an indication that the Xbox 360 price cut played a bigger role on hindering PS3 sales than what we originally expected.”
“The surge in Xbox 360 sales likely came from the mainstream and casual markets who were enticed by a sub-USD 200 Xbox 360 SKU,” he added.
TechRadar has contacted Sony for further comment on the matter.
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