My two cents...
It wasn't the customers choice. The movie industry decided to back Blu Ray over HD-DVD. Its an estabilshed fact. Some say it was for revenge over the huge piracy and downloads which they blamed Microsoft for enabling via windows. You are correct in this so i don't see why its being contested.
Another estabilshed fact that you have said which isn't worth contesting. DVD was on sale in Japan for months and didn't take off. It only took off in Japan because the pS2 could not only play DVDs but was the most affordable DVD unit around at the time. That was also the reason why people brought the PS2 in the west. It sure as hell wasn't for the games because no actual game of any worth appeared on the PS2 until three years into after launch.Something they stole from Sega with the Megadrive and Master system 2 facelifts...to your main point...
Yes another estabilshed fact. PS1's always broke down. It was unique at the time because game systems up to that point wasn't known to break down and especially break down that frequently. The PS2 also did the same thing. I knew someone who owned a Saturn and his mom chucked the system from the top of the stairs and it still worked. Saturn the durable... to be this good takes sega... to last this good takes sega again. To break down after a feather lands on your game system takes Sony. True story by the way...
Exactly because many people who still own those systems have never complained about the systems breaking down. Compared to the PSx userbase who probably doesn't have a workable PSX and PS2 working from when they originally brought it.
Yes another fact well estabilshed. Well said.
I think that's the first time im hearing what you are saying about HD-DVD being punished. It doesn't even seems far-fetched, so it must be true to some(if not a high) degree. There were some dirty games being played behind closed doors.
The PS1 was actually a project ordered by Nintendo. But it seems Nintendo was very unhappy about the final product and rejected it. This has to mean something?
So, what does one do when one has a product that the orginal buyer doesn't want anymore? Surely Sega wouldn't want it. So they did the only thing they could do in order to make profit. Selling it under their own brand.
And as they didnt even know where to start, they turned to Sega for inspiration as Sega was pioneering what was called Virtual Reality at that time. True story by the way, you can find an official Sony statement about that.
Sony really played all its cards in order to make its console take-off. It even started thinking outside of the box, using its know-how and started combining elements that were absolutely not done before. In a time when Sega and Nintendo used the technology that was currently available on the market, Sony totally fabricated a new one, which even became the new standard, to sell its console. While Sega's GD-Rom, a proprietary 1GB disc, was a great invention for the gaming world. The
ingenius invention of the DVD; which is actually a
mass-market product, totally blew it away.
Nowadays, we have a word for that:
Overkill. .Sega really couldn't compete with Sony's business model. As they are not playing in the same playground.
But people were blinded by the Versatility of the DVD:
"What? movies and games??"on a console??" Parents, were starting thinking rather
"economics" and saw the
savings they could do.
But then came some new problems, mass market production, came at a cost. What used to be durable became a
Fast moving consumable good (FMCG). So, yes, said the industry, we can sell you a versatile system. But it wont last long. Hell, it will even break if you are not careful with it. It might even break if you are careful too!
To me Sega products, and Nintendo even more, are high quality and durable products. Though the fact that did Sega introduce the world to the concept of "facelift to consoles". It was doing it in order to reduce production costs. We all know that the new competitors are doing it aswell, but this didnt happen in the same timeframe. The exception to the rule is that even before the facelift(s), Sega's products were still flawless and of high and durable quality.
Do you guys remember that Youtube video about where a two person's tested how tough the N64 was? They even drove over the N64 with a truck?! The thing didn't shatter to pieces!