You have to trust the word of a man with a Blood Brothers avatar.
[quote name='orimental']As can be seen from the Wii and 360, an exclusive game doesn't necessarily equate to being a good game.
Blu-ray still has to prove that it can thrive when there is a flow of major titles (exclusive or not) that many are waiting for.
The majority of BD players out there are PS3's. That's about
1.74 million in the US (~4.05 million total). If you include standalones, that's maybe another
100,000. In the US, there are about
300,000 HD DVD standalones (including the 360 add-on) and about
500,000 players worldwide. That's what? A nearly 5:1 lead in the US.
All of the following figures come from
Home Media Magazine (07/29)
But what do disc sales tell us? Nielsen's VideoScan figures report only a 3:1 lead (week ending 07/22), only 2:1 (year-to-date 2007), and only 3:2 (since inception). Why is it that BD players have a 5:1 lead in the US, but only, at best, a 3:1 lead in software sales? We can account for 100,000 (standalones) buying films for sure. What's worth noting here is that not all PS3 owners are buying Blu-ray films. So why can we assume that it's automatically going to assume just because of the "trojan horse"? With the exception of spikes from big releases like Spider-Man 3 and PotC: AWE, I honestly can't see Blu-ray being the major winner here, at least not until after we see how it does when the most-wanted titles for the PS3 come out. It's hard to see BD sales picking up enough once those games come out to cover the gap in the hardware to software ratio.[/QUOTE]
I think the reason that the numbers are so close is many people buying into the HD era of movies are enthusiasts that own both formats. There are many people (even here) that own both and don't care one bit what format the movie comes out for. Myself I just want to watch my favorite films in high def, so I will support both formats until one goes belly up.