Well, twice as many people are on STEAM and XBL than PSN, but all of this is just spin. PSN is still large enough to be lucrative and If Valve could effortlessly port their games to the PS3, they would. Since they can't, they are trying to find an excuse that sounds as legitimate as possible.
The funny thing is that these companies are getting more and more ridiculous with the spin they put on their publicly made excuses, and people are starting to see through the crap.
Take Nvidia for example.
Their next and great video card (which is actually a processor/video card hybrid (code named
Fermi) ) has been in a lot of trouble. They were supposed to release it two months ago, but were unable to because of manufacturing problems. The card has now been delayed into next year, while ATi's new DX11 5 series line, which came out a few months ago, has virtually had no competition and has been selling like hotcakes -- which is fantastic for ATi.
When ATi was a few weeks away from the launch of its new card, and people were wondering about Nvidia's response, Nvidia released a press statement that was so silly, that it confirmed all rumors the about Nvidia's
Fermi being in massive trouble.
Basically, Nvidia released a statement saying that DX11 was completely useless and gamers were better off keeping their DX10 cards etc etc. Basically it was a statement that countered the 'push the envelope' mission statement of a graphics solution giant like Nvidia.
When the positions were reversed, as they were with DX10 -- when Nvidia had the 8800GTX ready and ATi was struggling with its low yielding parts, Nvidia had been pushing their tech like it was a gift from god.
A few years later, with ATi on top with their DX11 part, Nvidia found itself releasing a press release stating that their tech. was good enough, and that DX11 wasn't a big deal.
But people aren't stupid, and one would think that the best course of action is to keep silent about one's inadequacies rather than issue farcical press releases.
Then again, these companies are huge, with lots of powerful shareholders to please, so one can only imagine the sort of pressure Jen-Hsun Huang was under when ATi hit the mark, and Nvidia was a quarter of a year away from a launch. Typically, whenever a video card company is a month behind, it at least conducts a paper launch, but Nvidia was unable to do even that.
This, you guys will find funny:
http://www.anandtech.com/video/showdoc.aspx?i=3651I asked two people at NVIDIA why Fermi is late; NVIDIA's VP of Product Marketing, Ujesh Desai and NVIDIA's VP of GPU Engineering, Jonah Alben. Ujesh responded: because designing GPUs this big is "fucking hard".