Microsoft started
selling its next-generation Xbox
360 gaming console in the US at midnight on Tuesday.
In a well orchestrated marketing assault, the vendor had invited 3,500
hard-core gamers to an airport hanger in a desert outside Los Angeles for the
official launch party.
Microsoft had also encouraged 4,500 US retailers to open their stores at
midnight.
Shops quickly sold out of the gaming consoles or had taken advance orders
from consumers. Others handed out tickets and raffled off the privilege to buy
one of the $300 basic systems or a $400 premium set with a wireless controller
and hard drive.
Microsoft had predicted prior to the launch that it
would sell three million units in the first 90 days after the unveiling. It is
not clear, however, whether stores will be restocked in time for Christmas.
This looming Xbox shortage drove some determined
buyers to eBay, where prices
quickly skyrocketed.
The
highest
price paid on Tuesday was a staggering $10,600. A gamer placed the bid in a
one-day auction ending on Tuesday afternoon which promised overnight shipping to
allow the new owner to receive his premium unit on Wednesday.
While $10,600 is clearly an exception, dozens of systems sold for around
$3,000, mostly in auctions ending early on Tuesday morning in the US.
One listing, in which an Xbox premium was
sold
for $3,050, advertised the system with the comment: "Buy early and save
money."
About 18,000 Xbox 360 listings were put up on eBay in the hours after the
launch, although not all items sold due to high reserve prices. By Tuesday
afternoon premium consoles were selling for an average $800.
The auction website is one of the only ways for European or Asian buyers to
obtain an Xbox 360. The console is set to go on sale in Europe on 2 December,
followed by an Asian launch on 10 December.
The first Xbox was launched in 2001 as Microsoft
attempted to grab a chunk of a video gaming market which is now worth $28bn. The
console put Microsoft past
Nintendo, but
Sony is still leading the
market with its Playstation 2 and
Playstation Portable.
Sony and Nintendo are scheduled to unveil their responses to the Xbox 360
next year. Sony's Playstation 3 is expected to be
technologically superior to the Xbox through the use of the new
Cell processor co-developed with
IBM and
Toshiba.
Nintendo, meanwhile, is believed to be positioning its new
Revolution as a low cost gaming console.
Silicon Valley
Sleuth:
The
art of Xbox 360 price gouging
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