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Xbox One outsells PlayStation 4 on Black Friday despite bigger interest in PS4

xbox one outsells playstation 4 black friday wii u trails far behind controllers
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This holiday season isn’t marked by a heated console war, but if you’re looking for a fight, here’s something to sate your appetite: The Microsoft Xbox One outsold the Sony PlayStation 4 on Black Friday for the second year in a row. The Nintendo Wii U continues to trail by a large margin.

The Xbox One captured 53 percent of gaming console sales on Black Friday, according to shopper insights company InfoScout. The PS4 was second with 31 percent of Black Friday console sales, while the Xbox 360 was third with 9 percent. The Nintendo Wii U was fourth with 6 percent of sales, while the PS3 was fifth with 1 percent of Black Friday gaming console sales.

InfoScout asked parents who bought a gaming console on Black Friday if they purchased one for their children. For parents who bought a Wii U, 92 percent said yes. The response was 66 percent for parents who purchased an Xbox One and 45 percent for those who bought a PS4.

A recent Nielsen Games study found that 37 percent of kids ages 6-12 in the U.S. want a PS4, while 37 percent want an Xbox One and 33 percent want a Wii U.

When it comes to teenagers, 36 percent want a PS4, 35 percent want an Xbox One and 17 percent want a Wii U. Meanwhile, 21 percent of adults want a PS4, 16 percent want an Xbox One and 12 percent want a Wii U.

The Nielsen study also found that 42 percent of adults express a very strong interest in owning at least one video game platform in the next six months.

Back in July, Xbox UK marketing chief Harvey Eagle said there was a “momentum shift” in the battle against the PS4, thanks in part to Titanfall.

Jason Hahn
Jason Hahn is a part-time freelance writer based in New Jersey. He earned his master's degree in journalism at Northwestern…
PlayStation Plus Premium is off to a rough start overseas
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As gamers debate whether Xbox Game Pass burnout is actually here, Sony is launching its own enhanced PlayStation Plus subscription service on PS4 and PS5. New higher PlayStation Plus tiers started rolling out in Asia on May 23 and will make their way to the rest of the world over the next month. Unfortunately, a couple of issues already seem to be plaguing PlayStation Plus Premium during its first days on the market.
From how much people have to pay for the service to how the retro games themselves play, customers are running into a slew of problems with Sony's service. While it's a rough start for PlayStation Plus Premium and its chances compared to the notable success of Xbox Game Pass, Sony's project isn't quite doomed.
A lacking game library
While this issue is subjective depending on how many games you've played and what you're looking for out of this subscription service, the launch library for PlayStation Plus Premium has been largely painted as underwhelming by fans. Even if it's a bit better than what a blog post earlier this month initially suggested, it mainly contains PS4 games a lot of hardcore PlayStation fans like myself have already paid for and played. Some questionable games like Balan Wonderworld and Mighty No. 9 also stand out even more thanks to the limited selection.
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The PS1, PSP, and PS2 game lineups are thin at launch, with major franchises like Sly Cooper and Metal Gear Solid completely missing. Trophy support isn't ubiquitous across all retro games, which is frustrating for trophy hunters. PS3 games are not natively emulated on the console; they stream from the cloud and don't include DLC originally released for them, according to VGC.
While this differs from person to person, the PlayStation Plus Premium lineup is starting off on shaky ground compared to Xbox Game Pass, which already gets flack for whether it has a good month or not.
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Despite these issues, PlayStation Plus Premium isn't doomed to fail.
Any new subscription service will have its fair share of problems, especially right out of the gate. Xbox Game Pass was not an overnight success; it had years to build up to become the popular (and sometimes controversial) subscription service it is today. The game library will improve over time as Sony makes more deals with companies for current-gen games and continues to port older PS1, PSP, and PS2 games to the service. They still have a chance to make sure it's the NTSC versions of the games available in North America, so we aren't playing slower versions of these classics. And once PlayStation Plus Premium's launch is months or years behind us, these discount surcharges won't matter to subscribers as much anymore.
Hopefully, Sony can learn from and correct these mistakes as PlayStation Plus Premium rolls out worldwide and subscribers utilize it for an extended period of time. If it does, PlayStation Plus Premium can be the Xbox Game Pass alternative that PlayStation users seem to want, rather than a rough first draft of something that Xbox is already doing pretty well. 

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