I hope you're happy Sony and everyone who bought a system to sell it. I hope you get home today and read every single story about every single incident that happened about the PS3 launch and think to yourself, "Jesus, maybe my one system of the 150 thousand could have been a part of this," before you toss the thing for some spoiled bastard on E-Bay. You're just as much to blame about all of the shit that happens as Sony is for not making enough of these. It's a god damn toy, a piece of entertainment that people are getting shot at and beat upon. It's a game system that is causing people to break into each other's cars and businesses, to hold up stores for, to ruin other's Christmas for as you look to pawn the damn thing. It's a game system that causes a mother to sit outside of a Target for days with only a blanket, a chair, and her baby carriage.
Maybe I'm way to believing in the American public, but there's someone out there who had been rolling their quarters for months now saving up for a PS3 who just couldn't get one. I know the joy I had when I worked all summer at a summer camp to save up for a Sega Dreamcast, the first console I bought with my own money. It sickens me how so many people are willing to take advantage of what was once a child's joy for, and for so many parents who willing take place in this economy of either being leeched or leeching off of others.
Last night and today we've seen a very ugly side of the United State's "ideal" of free market capitalism. The wanton greed of Americans (both businesses in encouraging this behavior, bundling, and any number of other things and the Joe Q public for having it), and the blundering incompitence of Sony crossed into a new, dark place last night. Comfort yourself today by saying, "It's not my fault. There's a demand out there, and I'm just filling that demand," and realize what you're saying is the same thing that a drug dealer would say. Just because there's a demand doesn't make it right. Just because you can wait for 2 days straight in a Wal Mart doesn't mean that you deserve the damn thing more then someone who wants to use a video game system to play.
In other words, I hope you're happy with yourselves. I hope you guys realize that you were just a part of everything that is wrong with gaming. And I hope, sincerely hope, that the little bit of decency left inside of you gnaws away at you while waiting for your payday.
Maybe I'm way to believing in the American public, but there's someone out there who had been rolling their quarters for months now saving up for a PS3 who just couldn't get one. I know the joy I had when I worked all summer at a summer camp to save up for a Sega Dreamcast, the first console I bought with my own money. It sickens me how so many people are willing to take advantage of what was once a child's joy for, and for so many parents who willing take place in this economy of either being leeched or leeching off of others.
Last night and today we've seen a very ugly side of the United State's "ideal" of free market capitalism. The wanton greed of Americans (both businesses in encouraging this behavior, bundling, and any number of other things and the Joe Q public for having it), and the blundering incompitence of Sony crossed into a new, dark place last night. Comfort yourself today by saying, "It's not my fault. There's a demand out there, and I'm just filling that demand," and realize what you're saying is the same thing that a drug dealer would say. Just because there's a demand doesn't make it right. Just because you can wait for 2 days straight in a Wal Mart doesn't mean that you deserve the damn thing more then someone who wants to use a video game system to play.
In other words, I hope you're happy with yourselves. I hope you guys realize that you were just a part of everything that is wrong with gaming. And I hope, sincerely hope, that the little bit of decency left inside of you gnaws away at you while waiting for your payday.