LOS ANGELES--For the software publishing industry, video games are a numbers game. And for now, Microsoft is on the losing end.
That's the upshot from the Electronics Entertainment Expo, the game industry's main trade show, where new games for Microsoft's Xbox have largely been limited to "me too" titles--games already appearing on other consoles. Microsoft has said it expects to have more than 200 games for the Xbox by the end of the year, but less than two dozen of those will be exclusive Xbox titles from third-party publishers.
Sony, by contrast, is touting high-profile exclusives from game publishers. "Grand Theft Auto III," the top-selling video game for the past few months, will remain available only for Sony's PlayStation 2, with publisher Take Two Interactive Software scrapping previous plans for an Xbox version. New versions of Eidos' "Tomb Raider" and Electronic Arts' "Medal of Honor" franchises will also be available only for the PS2, as will upcoming online and offline updates of the "Final Fantasy" series from longtime Sony booster Squaresoft.
Game publishers say it's a simple matter of economics. With Sony having sold more than 30 million PlayStation 2 units worldwide and the Xbox just edging up to the 4 million mark, they have to put their money where the market is. The result is that even the biggest Xbox supporters are producing two PlayStation 2 games for every Xbox title.
Xbox is easily number one in terms of game console hardware but there are barely any good Xbox only games and it looks like that maybe the case for a while. If you buy Xbox now you may have nothing you like to play, but with PS2 there are virtually all the Xbox games plus a much larger and better assortment that work only on PS2. Then there is the risk in buy an Xbox now. What if it flops and later no one is producing good games for it, I seems to me that buying PS2 now would be the wise move and wait until next year to see if Xbox is worth getting. After all, these things are only $200.00 so having both may not be that big an expense.
Source: ZDNet News