Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

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J.M. Vargas

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby J.M. Vargas » April 26th, 2007, 5:55 pm

[url]http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18335424/[/url]

[quote]The chief architect of Sony Corp.'s flagship PlayStation game console will retire in June as the company struggles to retain its dominance in the video game industry.

Ken Kutaragi, 56, an icon among gamers, will step down as Sony Computer Entertainment Inc.'s chairman and group chief executive, Tokyo-based Sony said Thursday. He will be replaced by Kazuo Hirai, who is now president and chief operating officer of the division.

In December, Kutaragi was relieved of day-to-day responsibilities as president of the video game unit but stayed on as its chief executive and chairman.

 

Kutaragi's most recent brainchild, the PlayStation 3 console, came out in November but was marred by embarrassing production shortages and a $600 price tag that some Sony fans said was too steep. For the past several months, Sony has resorted to giving away free game titles and other marketing gimmicks to spur sales.

Sony has also struggled to expand beyond the young, male demographic of so-called "hardcore" gamers. Investors have been grumbling for several quarters that Sony has failed to attract women, young children and older gamers to its products, and its market share has shrunk as a result.

Problems related to Sony's limited demographic came into sharp focus late last year, when Nintendo Co. launched a rival game console, the Wii, for about $250. The device — which includes a diminutive, wrist-mounted controller and a console that's skimpy on realistic graphics — has become a surprise hit among girls, suburban mothers, senior citizens and other people who have never considered themselves gamers.

Sony shipped 1.84 million PS3 machines worldwide through Dec. 31. In the same period, Nintendo sold 3.19 million Wii machines worldwide.

The loss to Nintendo prompted Sony Corp. Chief Executive Howard Stringer to escalate his turnaround effort. In November, the Welsh-born executive — one of the first foreign-born CEOs of a major Japanese electronics company — stripped Kutaragi of day-to-day management responsibilities.

Sony executives would not comment beyond a news release Thursday, and representatives refused to discuss whether the departure was related to performance.

"Mr. Kutaragi has said that he has been considering this decision for some time," Sony Computer Entertainment America spokeswoman Kimberly Otzman said in a statement. "Sony and SCE will continue to seek Mr. Kutaragi's input and ideas from a broad perspective, while continuing to support him as much as possible in the realization of his dreams."

The retirement of Kutaragi — dubbed the "Gutenberg of Video Games" by Time Magazine in 2004 — will be effective June 19. After that, he'll be honorary chairman of the entertainment division and will serve as Stringer's senior technology adviser.

Although Kutaragi will remain an adviser, some U.S. gaming experts said the retirement may have been a face-saving firing and an effort by Stringer to recover from the botched PS3 launch.

"Sony had too much hype and not enough delivery," Billy Pidgeon, games analyst for the research firm IDC, said of the PS3. "Sony didn't notice that their audience was dwindling and didn't increase the base by playing to a wider demographic, and instead it played the old-school game of playing to the 18- to 32-year-old male early adopter."[/quote]

 

Anybody think Kutaragi would be retiring now if the PS3 was a monster hit and Blu-ray was overwhelming HD sales (instead of fighting with HD-DVD for a meager 1% of home video sales)?


Atarifever1
Posts: 3892
Joined: December 31st, 1969, 7:00 pm

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby Atarifever1 » April 26th, 2007, 10:01 pm

I'll repeat what I've said on Atariage about this: it's sad that the person  believe is least responsible for this is the one geting fired.  How about firing the people who forced Blu-Ray on the project.

Michael D

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby Michael D » April 26th, 2007, 11:56 pm

[QUOTE=Atarifever]I'll repeat what I've said on Atariage about this: it's sad that the person  believe is least responsible for this is the one geting fired.  How about firing the people who forced Blu-Ray on the project.
[/QUOTE]

Certainly true, but it was Kutaragi who said that the $600 price tag for the PS3 was "too cheap."

m0zart1
Posts: 3117
Joined: December 31st, 1969, 7:00 pm

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby m0zart1 » April 27th, 2007, 12:25 am

I think this news is pretty sad.  Say what you want about him, but his term introduced two of the most popular successive consoles of all time.  Of course, at least two more were rather lackluster, but you can't win them all.

I kinda feel cheated by his departure.  I am still waiting to plug into the Matrix and experience the fourth dimension.  I am really going to miss the absurd statements

Funkmaster V

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby Funkmaster V » April 27th, 2007, 8:55 am

Terrible. Yeah, this was a crap move to appease stockholders. Somebody's head had to roll. The PS2 is still one of the best selling systems if not the best right now. This guy is awesome and they probably just screwed the hell up down the road now.

"He shamed his house!"

I wonder how Sony PR is going to spin this. You normally don't fire your top dog after a successful jaunt.

Funkmaster V
PS: I would like to refference that this article states that the attempt to give away things during the sale of the PS3 was seen as desperate by this reporter. I know everyone thought this was sugary sweet and wonderful of Sony but hopefully this adds perspective.

m0zart1
Posts: 3117
Joined: December 31st, 1969, 7:00 pm

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby m0zart1 » April 27th, 2007, 11:58 am

[QUOTE=Funkmaster V]PS: I would like to refference that this article states that the attempt to give away things during the sale of the PS3 was seen as desperate by this reporter. I know everyone thought this was sugary sweet and wonderful of Sony but hopefully this adds perspective.[/QUOTE]

For the standard of any company, which is only in it to make money (and thus, every move is by definition desparate to some extent), it is sugary sweet and wonderful of Sony.  I mean my goodness, only a few days ago Microsoft was praised for adding BC when in fact they only did it to keep their fan base happy and motivate a few to buy consoles.  In this case, what a company does that fits the "sweet" model isn't mutually exclusive to such a move also being desperate.


Funkmaster V

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby Funkmaster V » April 27th, 2007, 1:05 pm

[QUOTE=m0zart]

[QUOTE=Funkmaster V]PS: I would like to refference that this article states that the attempt to give away things during the sale of the PS3 was seen as desperate by this reporter. I know everyone thought this was sugary sweet and wonderful of Sony but hopefully this adds perspective.[/QUOTE]

For the standard of any company, which is only in it to make money (and thus, every move is by definition desparate to some extent), it is sugary sweet and wonderful of Sony.  I mean my goodness, only a few days ago Microsoft was praised for adding BC when in fact they only did it to keep their fan base happy and motivate a few to buy consoles.  In this case, what a company does that fits the "sweet" model isn't mutually exclusive to such a move also being desperate.

[/QUOTE]


Sony is desperate for any good press right now. Xbox is strengthening their system. This is not even close to being the same thing, but believe what you will.

Funkmaster V

m0zart1
Posts: 3117
Joined: December 31st, 1969, 7:00 pm

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby m0zart1 » April 27th, 2007, 1:09 pm

[QUOTE=Funkmaster V]Sony is desperate for any good press right now. Xbox is strengthening their system. This is not even close to being the same thing, but believe what you will.[/QUOTE]

Microsoft has been desperately pushing their BC list since they had a huge negative reaction from fans last June.  This is definitely in the proximity of being the same thing, but believe what you will.

Heck, I am convinced it's MORE of the thing you are discussing -- desparation.  Again, giving out expensive televisions to fans who didn't know about it and were already in line anyway is a way of rewarding those fans for being loyal to Sony at a time when they were under fire.  It doesn't provide an incentive at all to someone else buying a Playstation 3 after that time.  Adding BC to the 360 does provide incentive to 360 buyers to go ahead and make that purchase.

J.M. Vargas

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby J.M. Vargas » April 27th, 2007, 11:57 pm

It's amazing that Ken Kutagari is following the footsteps of once Nintendo elite designer Gumpei Yokoi before the latter's untimely passing.  After heading the design team that created the original GameBoy system and the "Metroid" series (two of Nintendo's biggest money-making intellectual properties) Yokoi-san's push for his Virtual Boy system (which bombed badly) bought him a one-way ticket out of Nintendo's graces.  Let's just say I hope Ken has someone else to change the tires of his exotic sports cars when he gets a flat in the middle of a busy street.  I hear Howard Stringer likes to drive buses around Tokyo just for fun!   


m0zart1
Posts: 3117
Joined: December 31st, 1969, 7:00 pm

Ken Kutaragi "retires" from Sony

Postby m0zart1 » April 28th, 2007, 12:12 am

[QUOTE=J.M. Vargas]

It's amazing that Ken Kutagari is following the footsteps of once Nintendo elite designer Gumpei Yokoi before the latter's untimely passing.  After heading the design team that created the original GameBoy system and the "Metroid" series (two of Nintendo's biggest money-making intellectual properties) Yokoi-san's push for his Virtual Boy system (which bombed badly) bought him a one-way ticket out of Nintendo's graces.  Let's just say I hope Ken has someone else to change the tires of his exotic sports cars when he gets a flat in the middle of a busy street.  I hear Howard Stringer likes to drive buses around Tokyo just for fun!   

[/QUOTE]

Yeah, Nintendo really screwed Gunpei.  I've never quite forgiven them for it.  Since Metroid is my second favorite game series of all time, I consider Gunpei my second favorite game developer.  That whole chapter really upsets me.



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