All quiet on the Australasian front…



Blackjack

Blackjack

Online Blackjack in Canada for 2026: Safe Sites and Best Tables Online blackjack in Canada is one of the few ...
New

New

New Online Casino in Canada for 2026: Comparing Bonuses, Payouts and Games Choosing the best new online casino in Canada ...
Live

Live

Live Casino Online in Canada 2026 Playing at a live casino online in Canada in 2026 means you'll see a ...
Mobile

Mobile

Best Mobile Casino in Canada 2026: Top Sites, Apps and Safety A mobile casino in Canada is an online platform ...
Prepaid Card

Prepaid Card

Best Prepaid Card Casinos in Canada Prepaid card casino is a good option for Canadian players who want to control ...
Slots

Slots

Real Money Online Slots in Canada 2026 When choosing online slots for real money in Canada, two things matter: Is ...
No Deposit

No Deposit

Free Spins No Deposit Bonuses in Canada: Top Picks and Real Value Explained Free spins no deposit bonuses in Canada ...
Instant Withdrawal

Instant Withdrawal

Instant Withdrawal Casino Canada 2026: Fastest Payout Sites and Quick Payment Methods An instant withdrawal casino in Canada isn't one ...
Crypto

Crypto

Crypto Casinos in Canada 2026 Crypto casinos in Canada use digital currencies like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Litecoin for deposits and ...
Raidenex
09-01-2005, 01:56 PM
The PSP was launched in Australia today, and according to retailers, you’d think it was the second coming. PSP posters everywhere, merchadise out the front to display, brochures galore, annoying ads on TV –

And people really don’t seem interested. Seriously, I remember when the Nintendo DS was launched, you had to have a preorder to get one. EB was packed when I went it to pick mine up – it looked like just another normal day in there today.

A pretty inauspicious start for the system in Australia – in a nice surprise twist, though, the Australian UMDs work in my imported US PSP. Prices are also decent – AU$22 for UMD movies, AU$65 for games. I was expecting a lot higher, considering DS games retail for about AU$80. In case you’re wondering, the system was released for AU$399. I’m pretty happy I picked mine up a month ago for AU$420, and a game for AU$50. All in all, I spent $5 to get it early – not a bad trade.

To any Aussie (and European) shriners debating over whether they’re going to spend their money on Sony’s shiny new portable, I highly recommend it – it finally feels like gaming, if you know what I mean. When I play a game on my PSP, it’s like playing a game on my PS2 – the DS still had the whole ‘mini-game’ feel to it.


chewey
09-01-2005, 01:59 PM
The PSP is yet to reach my town, being tiny and rubbish and all. I may head up to EB games tomorrow or the next and have a look for one, I’ve been interested in buying it for a while.

pedo mc tax me softly, black person (whom i love)
09-01-2005, 03:47 PM
The lack of sales on the launch in Australia probably means a whole bunch of people imported their PSP already.

I mean, gamers in Australia usually import things anyway, given that it takes forever for anything to be released there, right?


Crub
09-01-2005, 05:03 PM
On a totally different subject, I think Johnny Depp looks like a child molester. More so in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

Neo Xzhan
09-01-2005, 07:29 PM
PSP went live here aswell, and it’s enjoying a rather large fandom, I think the hype for the PSP here is bigger then for the DS. And it should be, it’s FAR more impressive then the DS and has over a dozen titles (good! titles) to go with it’s release.

April
09-01-2005, 07:49 PM
The only thing I’ve really heard about it is an article in the paper complaining about how we’re paying �50 more for it than the USA or Japan and �10 more than the rest of Europe.

Same price and Australia though and �2 less than New Zealand.


Raidenex
09-02-2005, 02:48 AM
The lack of sales on the launch in Australia probably means a whole bunch of people imported their PSP already.

I mean, gamers in Australia usually import things anyway, given that it takes forever for anything to be released there, right?

That could be quite a large part of it – according to Sony’s lawsuit against Hong-Kong based importer Lik-Sang, over 250 000 US and JAP PSPs have already been exported to Europe – that’s a quarter of their target sales for the launch window.


Scroll to Top