This is one of the reasons being an early adopter is a mistake. The games won't go anywhere. The PS4 won't go anywhere. Just wait a while. It's better than having to go through all the inevitable launch hassle.
If there weren't people willing to buy the systems on day one, no one would be making them...Adam Jensen said:This is one of the reasons being an early adopter is a mistake. The games won't go anywhere. The PS4 won't go anywhere. Just wait a while. It's better than having to go through all the inevitable launch hassle.
Most of the time anyway, PS3 launch system had more capabilities than newer versions. I also heard that there were more defective models in future iterations when cheaper parts were used to lower costs though I can't confirm it.Trishbot said:Advice I've gotten from nearly 30 years of gaming...
Never buy a launch system. That's when they're the most expensive, most defective, the smallest game library, the least amount of features...
... But I know some people need to scratch their Killzone itch, so I understand.
I know that there will always be people willing to buy consoles on launch. But people like us who know enough about this industry and spend our time in gaming forums just shouldn't do it. We should first let the peasants taste the food that might be poisoned.Church185 said:If there weren't people willing to buy the systems on day one, no one would be making them...Adam Jensen said:This is one of the reasons being an early adopter is a mistake. The games won't go anywhere. The PS4 won't go anywhere. Just wait a while. It's better than having to go through all the inevitable launch hassle.
By all means, keep preaching "wait and see" if you like this hobby. /sarcasm
We won't know for sure until tonight/tomorrow really. I mean, the first batch of consoles always seem to have problems when it comes to manufacturing. Remember the dirty lenses that prevented a number of Wii owners from playing games like Brawl, or the good old fire problems of the original Xbox, or even the DVD error PS2's were giving at launch.Dragonbums said:I highly doubt this will be an "isolated" incident. We are talking about people getting the console early reporting problems. Imagine how big this problem will get when it turns out that it's a lot of people with this issue.
I don't mind testing it myself. If anything major happens, a warranty will probably have me covered. I was worried when I first started hearing reports of malfunctions, but then I looked at the numbers. Right now it's looking like 7 out of 4400~ PS4s that are in the wild have bricked. I'm totally ok with those odds.Adam Jensen said:I know that there will always be people willing to buy consoles on launch. But people like us who know enough about this industry and spend our time in gaming forums just shouldn't do it. We should first let the peasants taste the food that might be poisoned.
Do you have a source for that "7 out of 4400" statistic? It seems awfully dubious.Church185 said:I don't mind testing it myself. If anything major happens, a warranty will probably have me covered. I was worried when I first started hearing reports of malfunctions, but then I looked at the numbers. Right now it's looking like 7 out of 4400~ PS4s that are in the wild have bricked. I'm totally ok with those odds.
The drive that brings me to gaming forums is the same drive that makes me want to be there from the beginning. I get that it's not for everyone, but it sucks that a lot of people I respect here look down on people who want to take the leap.
I don't think it will be RroD levels of bad (let's be honest, that one was a doozy. Even for defective products) but I do think it will be much more common and certainly not "isolated".Neronium said:We won't know for sure until tonight/tomorrow really. I mean, the first batch of consoles always seem to have problems when it comes to manufacturing. Remember the dirty lenses that prevented a number of Wii owners from playing games like Brawl, or the good old fire problems of the original Xbox, or even the DVD error PS2's were giving at launch.Dragonbums said:I highly doubt this will be an "isolated" incident. We are talking about people getting the console early reporting problems. Imagine how big this problem will get when it turns out that it's a lot of people with this issue.
No, it only will reach critical RRoD levels if the problem continues for longer than 6 months I say, and especially if Sony were to know what the problem is and doesn't even attempt to fix it. *see cheap soldering for why the RRoD was so common*
luvd1 said:I was thinking of calling it the WoD (wink of death). It makes it sound almost flirty.Spaceman Spiff said:Of course they'll say these are isolated incidents. That's the SOP for poor quality control. I wonder if BPoD(blue pulse of death) will be the new RRoD.
They all say this. It's the standard response but mostly true. All new hardware go through this stuff. The first batch of any launch of any hardware has ever gone cleanly. Me bothered? Nah. I'm too long in the tooth, I'd had been surprised if there wasn't any buggy systems.
It sounds like different issues, some hardware, some software from the day 1 patch. Like every release bugs slip through though it sounds like a small percentage getting the pre production versions.EHKOS said:Wow, problems occurring right at the beginning of a product's lifespan. Just give it a month or two, every console has had a problem right out of the launch gate. Although, this one is kinda hard to miss. The worst part about this seems to be that it's a hardware problem, which means they can't just patch it, which would be so much simpler and cost effective.
Looks more like Blue pulse of death. BPOD?luvd1 said:So no RRoD yet? Sweet.
That was thanks to cell processor, something PS4 will not be having a problem with.Alpha Maeko said:(The PS3 version either didn't exist or came out way later, or had lots of bugs 'n glitches in comparison.)