Well, Sony has committed. The PlayStation 2 will be
available on October 26, 2000, and it will cost $299. I will take a moment to thumb my
nose at anybody who predicted a price higher or lower it only makes sense that Sony
would release their second system at the same original price as the first. Sony also
intimated in their press conference that the PS2 will follow a similar price evolution as
its predecessor, which means the price will eventually drop.
The system will be slightly altered from
its Japanese cousin. The DVD software included on the memory card in the Japanese version
will be permanently installed in the hardware of the US version. Also, the US version will
have a bay at the rear to allow for an upgrade of a hard disk drive and a broadband modem.
Sony remains steadfast in their commitment to broadband, and is poised to assume an active
role in the conversion of Internet connections everywhere. Indeed, Sony sees itself as the
Che Guaverra of the Broadband Revolution.
Other than that, the system will
be virtually identical to the Japanese version. It will still play DVDs and PSX titles,
and the DVD functions are very near those of a dedicated DVD player. The titles Sony
demonstrated at E3, mostly The Matrix and The Wild Wild West, played very nicely. The PS2
titles Sony showed were more than impressive, and there will undoubtedly be more games
available for the system at launch than at any other console launch in history. Developers
have welcomed the PS2 with open arms, and it looks like all of us gamers will reap the
benefits of that welcome. No, the hardest thing to decide come next October 26 will not be
whether to buy the system, but which games to get with it.
--Shawn Rider