Just one week to go before Xbox 360 launches, and I'm sitting here trying to figure out whether my ridiculously overpriced pre-order bundle will ship on time or not.

The idea offering pre-orders only in bundle format is particularly interesting, mainly because I wonder what it does to the accessibility of these new generation of consoles to younger gamers. Take the bundles that ebgames offered: you had two options, you could get the core 360 bundle for $599 or the premium bundle for $699. I remember back to when I was a kid, and there was no way I'd be getting a $700 present for any day of the year. I've proposed the same question to a number of others, and no one seems to have a good response other than "my parents wouldn't have bought me a $700 console bundle when I was a kid." So I truly wonder, who is going to buy the supposed 1 million Xbox 360s that will be available in the US on November 22nd?

There is the possibility that expectations for parents have changed in the past 10 - 20 years, and that if your child wants a $700 Xbox 360 bundle, that it is a reasonable expenditure. I tend to find that hard to believe, as $700 could very well be two car payments, a rent check or pay all utilities for a month, and I do find it hard to believe that parents today would easily spend that on what essentially amounts to a single present.

The more likely option (in my opinion), is that unlike what I had originally expected, console gaming isn't hitting the new generation of kids like it did previous generations, rather it is growing up and getting to kids later on in life. Once you hit your early teens then the possibility for folks to at least start contributing to the price of a $700 bundle becomes possible. Is it just that gamers these days are forced to start later in life because of the sheer cost barrier?

Or am I totally off base here and is $700 just not considered a lot of money anymore? Hmm, if it is the latter option then that would make this the very first "I remember when _____ used to cost _____ in my day" post of my life. Not good.
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  • George Powell - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    I feel very similar about the Xbox 360. It is very expensive, even more when you factor in the cost of games. Certainly when I was young my parents never spent anything like that on a single present.

    I do think that the target audience has changed. I can certainly see a million 20 somethings with disposable income ordering the Xbox 360. And I'm sure many of these will also do the same for the PS3 next year.

    I don't think we're over the hill just yet, but consoles are turning out to be more of an adult plaything these days. Until we have kids that is when we use the excuse that we are treating them.
  • darkswordsman17 - Monday, November 14, 2005 - link

    Yeah, its the older crowd for sure. There's quite a large number of 15-25 year olds who have a lot of disposable income (or at least treat their income thusly).

    Also, there are a lot of parents who buy it for themselves, reasoning that hey its for the kids too, and thus can better justify it that way. Its similar to how TVs, VCRs, and DVD players had become, where they bought it for the whole family.

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