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Sony takes PlayStation 2 to China despite pirates
Beijing, Nov 29: Sony Corp will launch its popular PlayStation 2 game console in China next month, saying on Friday it must be `courageous` in the face of rampant piracy that has plagued the vast potential market.
Beijing, Nov 29: Sony Corp will launch its popular PlayStation 2 game console in China next month, saying on Friday it must be "courageous" in the face of rampant piracy that has plagued the vast potential market.
The machine, which debuted in Japan in early 2000 and in the United States even later that, will hit Chinese shelves on December 20 with a price tag of 1,988 yuan (USD 240). That compares to USD 179 in the United States.
"We have to realise the reality, it is impossible to control 100 per cent piracy both in China and the world,” Sony China Chairman Hiroshi Shoda told reporters in an upscale Beijing cinema. “We have to be courageous, to face the reality.” He declined to give sales projections.
Sony has sold 62 million PlayStation 2 (PS2) consoles worldwide, and is heading into the holiday season hoping to cut costs and squeeze more profits out of the market-leading machine.
PlayStation is crucial to the Japanese electronics giant's bottom line. Last year, the games division accounted for just 13 per cent of sales, but nearly two-thirds of operating profits.
Sony will initially sell the console in five Chinese cities — Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Chengdu, home to nearly 40 million people. Eventually more cities will follow.
Only two or three games will be available at launch, priced at 168 yuan, or around USD 20, each, well below US retail prices of USD 50 but above the dollar or two that pirated titles fetch on Chinese streets.
The games include cartoonish action title Ape Escape 2, and ICO, an evocative and graphically impressive adventure game set in a huge castle. An average of three games are to hit the Chinese market every month.
Sony said major game developers such as Konami Corp, Sega Corp, Namco Ltd and Taito Corp were also working on Chinese versions of their games.
Sony also aimed to enlist Chinese game developers to write software for the machine, Shoda said.
"I believe this encourages people to fight against piracy in order to protect their interests in intellectual property," he said.
Sony planned to introduce future game products, such as its upcoming handheld PSP device and future PlayStation versions, in China at the same time as other countries.
Sony's chief competitors are Microsoft Corp, which makes the Xbox console, and Japanese rival Nintendo Co Ltd, which sells the GameCube machine. Both consoles have sold about 10 million units.
Though all the machines are sold in Chinese-speaking regions like Hong Kong and Taiwan, their makers have shunned the mainland because of rampant counterfeiting.
Kou Xiaowei, deputy director of a division of China's General Administration of Press and Publication that oversees computer and video games, said he hoped others would follow Sony's lead.
"Everyone has always had a regret, that video games represented by the PS2 have not entered China. This has created a huge void in the Chinese market. I feel that from today, this void has been broken by Sony's PS2," Kou said.
In September, Nintendo said it would start selling a console developed specifically for the Chinese market. To thwart piracy, the machine uses a flash memory card to which games can be downloaded in stores.
Bureau Report
The machine, which debuted in Japan in early 2000 and in the United States even later that, will hit Chinese shelves on December 20 with a price tag of 1,988 yuan (USD 240). That compares to USD 179 in the United States.
"We have to realise the reality, it is impossible to control 100 per cent piracy both in China and the world,” Sony China Chairman Hiroshi Shoda told reporters in an upscale Beijing cinema. “We have to be courageous, to face the reality.” He declined to give sales projections.
Sony has sold 62 million PlayStation 2 (PS2) consoles worldwide, and is heading into the holiday season hoping to cut costs and squeeze more profits out of the market-leading machine.
PlayStation is crucial to the Japanese electronics giant's bottom line. Last year, the games division accounted for just 13 per cent of sales, but nearly two-thirds of operating profits.
Sony will initially sell the console in five Chinese cities — Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen and Chengdu, home to nearly 40 million people. Eventually more cities will follow.
Only two or three games will be available at launch, priced at 168 yuan, or around USD 20, each, well below US retail prices of USD 50 but above the dollar or two that pirated titles fetch on Chinese streets.
The games include cartoonish action title Ape Escape 2, and ICO, an evocative and graphically impressive adventure game set in a huge castle. An average of three games are to hit the Chinese market every month.
Sony said major game developers such as Konami Corp, Sega Corp, Namco Ltd and Taito Corp were also working on Chinese versions of their games.
Sony also aimed to enlist Chinese game developers to write software for the machine, Shoda said.
"I believe this encourages people to fight against piracy in order to protect their interests in intellectual property," he said.
Sony planned to introduce future game products, such as its upcoming handheld PSP device and future PlayStation versions, in China at the same time as other countries.
Sony's chief competitors are Microsoft Corp, which makes the Xbox console, and Japanese rival Nintendo Co Ltd, which sells the GameCube machine. Both consoles have sold about 10 million units.
Though all the machines are sold in Chinese-speaking regions like Hong Kong and Taiwan, their makers have shunned the mainland because of rampant counterfeiting.
Kou Xiaowei, deputy director of a division of China's General Administration of Press and Publication that oversees computer and video games, said he hoped others would follow Sony's lead.
"Everyone has always had a regret, that video games represented by the PS2 have not entered China. This has created a huge void in the Chinese market. I feel that from today, this void has been broken by Sony's PS2," Kou said.
In September, Nintendo said it would start selling a console developed specifically for the Chinese market. To thwart piracy, the machine uses a flash memory card to which games can be downloaded in stores.
Bureau Report