Last month, Sony Computer Entertainment America director of hardware marketing John Koller told GameSpot to expect "a lot of announcements coming up to E3 and particularly at E3."
In particular, he was referring to the PSP, which was the subject of
three reports today indicating that big things are in store for the
handheld.
Last night, gaming blog
Joystiq
received a screenshot of what was purportedly a Web survey about a
game-rental download service for the PSP. The text on the shot says
"the service will enable you to download a fixed number of games during
your subscription period...[which] might renew weekly, monthly, or for
some other time period." Sony already offers games for sale via digital
download, including the download-only Patapon 2.
The survey goes on to ask basic market-research questions about
pricing, subscription periods, maximum monthly rentals, and what number
of new games respondents would want to see added each month. The survey
also asked if the "recency" of the games on offer would be a factor and
how strongly respondents would want games on the release date itself.
Interestingly, the supposed survey also promises that "at launch, there
will be an extensive catalogue [note European spelling] of games to
choose from." Such a scenario is reminiscent of the PlayStation 3 video
store, which had movies and TV shows from Lionsgate, Warner, Disney,
Paramount, Turner Entertainment, MGM, and (of course) Sony Pictures
Entertainment on day one. That service was unveiled via a surprise
announcement during Sony's 2008 E3 press event.
With Sony saying that the PSP's UMD optical-disc format "isn't going away,"
any digitally distributed PSP game rental service would presumably
complement physical game rentals. That service appears to be well under
way, according to a Develop report today. Citing unnamed sources, the
European game-industry magazine said it "can confirm" that back in
March, Game Developers Conference attendees were "briefed" on the service behind closed doors.
The third PSP report of the day came from
CNET's news blog,
which reported that Sony has been meeting with record labels about an
iTunes-like music download service for the PlayStation Newtork in
general and PSPs in particular. However, "the sources said the talks
are only preliminary and no deals have been struck."
When asked for comment on all three reports, Sony reps said, "These are all rumor and speculations, which we cannot comment on."