[quote name='icruise']Talk about overreacting. You're going to feel pretty stupid when they announce that the trial period is over and anyone with a PSP can download these games. It's pretty clear to me that Sony was preoccupied with the PS3 launch and wanted to concentrate on getting the store working for the PS3 first.[/QUOTE]Tell me about it. Sony stated over and over again that the PS1 games will can be downloaded to PSP and PC, in the future, since they're trying to get the PlayStation store setup on PS3 first. And eventually, the games will be playable on PSP and PS3. Also, I still get tired of people saying $600, when the PS3 is $500 too (IMO, I feel that model is more appealing, since I don't need the different memory format reading and could careless about WiFi. I'll just upgrade the HDD myself to a 160GB).
Also, I see plenty to look forward in the PSP future (R&C Size Matters, Crisis Core, etc.) and plenty to look back on (I have 33 PSP games and still behind).
[quote name='furyk']I do feel like they pulled something on me. PS1 downloads on the PSP was always pitched as PS1 downloads on the PSP, not PS1 downloads on the PSP*.
*as long as you have a PS3
I agree that this should be taken with baby steps too, but I sincerely think that this should have been a selling point of the PSP, not a reward to the most loyal of loyal Sony customers. PS1 games on the PSP
is a selling point for PSP so why not establish that infastructure first rather then appealing to only 200,000 customers (at most) in the US? You can buy a PSP right now and you can't buy a PS3 until March. The PSP is hurting, the PS3 is not.
So maybe it is Sony's poor communication to blame, but Sony is to blame here. I probably would not have bought a PSP post E3 if they had said "PSP downloads of PS1 games for the PS3 only". So sure, they sold me a PSP in the short run, but they're just pushing me more and more towards buying the 360 versions of games over the PS3 versions simply because I'm tired of being "miscommunicated" to.[/QUOTE]I think Sony's other intention was that most memory sticks are small (can only go up to 4GB), so you really can't store many games on them. The only solution is to buy many memory sticks. Because of this, Sony felt it was best to put the games on a HDD, then copy them to be played on the go. If Sony would have allowed the downloads to work on PSP first. Also, Sony is more concerned about keeping a #1 position in the console industry, then try to be at the top of the handheld industry (part of the reason they have 100 PS3 games in development compared to around 50 PSP games).
Also, I wouldn't buy the 360 version of any multi-platform games (I plan to get the PS3 version for everything, even if it's considered inferior, although I doubt it), but that has to do with the 360 breaking (I'll be on my 2nd, and I highly doubt it will last long due to being
poorly made), and the 360 console is so freaking loud when playing games (compared to the PS3, which is quiet. I want peace and quiet while I play a game).