Even after almost a year in the UK and a lengthy spell at number one in Stuff’s gaming Top 10, the PS3 is clearly feeling unloved. Its big price tag and lack of blockbuster games have seen many plump for the Xbox 360 and Nintendo Wii, so it’s taken action and announced the Great PS3 Price Drop.
The original 60GB model has had its price slashed to £350, and there’s now a 40GB model which you can snap up for £300 – the same as an Xbox 360 Elite. This makes it by far the cheapest Blu-ray player in town – but is it also the best console?
Sleeker and sexier
Let’s start by comparing it back-to-back with the Xbox 360 Elite. The new version of Microsoft’s console has added a much-needed HDMI connection and a bigger hard-drive but you’d still need to tape a £130 HD-DVD drive and Wi-Fi adaptor to the top to bring it in line with the PS3. It’s a much less streamlined, not to mention noisier, piece of kit than the sleek Sony.
The new 40GB PS3 has, though, lost a few features to achieve its price drop. There are now only two USB ports, its media card slot for memory cards has disappeared and, more importantly, so has backwards compatibility. But unless you simply can’t get enough of the original Ridge Racer, these features won’t be a big miss, particularly with new next-gen titles on the horizon.
Finally, some games
And the PS3 does, finally, have some big titles to unleash. The fantastic Haze is its riposte to Halo 3, and includes a great four-player co-op mode. Elsewhere, Indiana Jones-fest Uncharted: Drake’s Fortune, petrol-head favourite Gran Turismo 5, Wipeout HD and Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots all look like promising exclusives over the Xbox 360.
But it’s still certainly the case, at the time of writing, that the Xbox 360 has the edge when it comes to games and online play. Prey, Gears of War, Bioshock, Mass Effect and Halo 3 are fine action titles that really show off the peerless Xbox Live arena.
Blu-ray bargain
Of course, the PS3 isn’t just about games – that Blu-ray player can spin movies too. And the drive’s playback is, we’re pleased to report, staggeringly good.
For starters, it has the latest 1.3a-specification HDMI output, and can play 1080p Blu-ray video at 24fps. The original release of the PS3 had rather disappointing dedicated DVD performance but the latest software has clearly rectified this, the on-board scaler proving capable of delivering bolder colour, sharper images and, crucially, far smoother movement. A 2008 upgrade means it’ll soon be able to act as a Freeview PVR too.
Switch to Blu-ray and the results are hugely impressive. Other dedicated players have naturally overtaken its performance since its launch and can output HD audio, but you’ll have to pay at least a £250 premium for the privilege.
And that Blu-ray factor is the crux of the PS3 dilemma. If you want games, and only games, the Xbox 360 is still your best bet. But with some hot titles on the horizon and that bargain Blu-ray playback, we’d still rather have the PS3 next to our telly.
















Comments
kollas
4 years ago
frankly i love my ps3 it looks great sounds great and plays great only annoying thing is that updates appear every day and these take around an hour to download and install so online play gets further and further away every time. but its worth it. cant wait for rfom 2 and everything else
JasonShaw
4 years ago
Just got my PS3. Couldn't wait any longer to play GTA 4! Awesome graphics, and great Blueray player. And they're releasing the 80gb for the same price this month! (Just annoyed I bought mine before I found that out.)
dfy
5 years ago
Big problem? just how many PS3 units are breaking down and not playing any disc that is loaded.Mine died on 12/02/08 after 6 weeks of use as a blue ray player.Read the search results and there must be thousands of dead units being replaced.
Saif
5 years ago
Ok the 40Gb is OK, but the 60GB always wins hands down and if you £300 to spend, it's more than worth your while to scrape together another £50 for the 60GB version (that is if you can find a £60gb PS3. Seems like SONY have stopped making them for Europe).