Le marché des consoles a historiquement été dominé par une seule plateforme leader, rendant extrêmement difficile pour les nouveaux concurrents d'obtenir une emprise significative. À moins qu'un nouveau système n'offre des avantages substantiels par rapport à l'actuel - comme le PlayStation 1 l'a fait contre le Super Nintendo - il risque de connaître des difficultés dès le départ. Les ventes limitées découragent les développeurs de créer des jeux pour la plateforme, ce qui réduit davantage l'intérêt des consommateurs. Ce cycle souligne pourquoi seuls les grands acteurs peuvent entrer réellement dans le domaine des consoles avec une chance de succès, car le développement pour une console dédiée exige un effort personnalisé pour chaque jeu.
Une stratégie potentielle consiste à lancer un hybride PC-console capable de faire fonctionner les jeux PC existants sans nécessiter de ports spécifiques. Cependant, cette approche comporte ses propres risques : si les utilisateurs peuvent facilement acheter des jeux via des plateformes comme Steam, les développeurs n'ont pas beaucoup d'incitation à optimiser les titres pour l'appareil. En parallèle, les avantages matériels sont souvent éphémères. Le PS5, malgré son âge, reste compétitivement prix pour sa performance, et tout nouveau appareil verra probablement son avantage matériel diminuer une fois que Sony lancera le PS6. La voie la plus viable pour pénétrer le marché pourrait reposer sur l'obtention de titres exclusifs attrayants, bien que cela implique un sacrifice financier important et soit une stratégie peu de sociétés - à part peut-être Microsoft - soient en mesure de soutenir.
Keep an eye on what Android is doing. I have a hunch they’re onto something.
It’s unlikely we’ll see another Ouya given how poorly it performed in the past, which was justified.
C’est tellement vrai, cette analyse du cycle vicieux où peu de ventes découragent les développeurs, ce qui réduit encore l’intérêt des joueurs. En tant qu’utilisateur PC, l’idée d’une console hybride capable de lancer mes jeux Steam sans portage spécifique me séduirait, mais je vois bien le risque que les éditeurs ne fassent aucun effort d’optimisation. Cela me fait hésiter à croire en une nouvelle concurrence viable, à part peut-être d’un géant comme Microsoft il y a vingt ans. Pensez-vous qu’un acteur comme Valve, avec le Steam Deck, pourrait briser ce modèle à long terme ?
Merci pour votre commentaire qui soulève à juste titre le défi de l’optimisation pour une console hybride, un point crucial de cette stratégie. Le Steam Deck de Valve est effectivement un cas fascinant, car il tente de briser le cycle en s’appuyant sur la bibliothèque PC existante et sur des outils comme Proton pour faciliter la compatibilité, même si, comme vous le notez, l’optimisation reste variable. Pour suivre son évolution concrète, je vous invite à consulter les rapports réguliers des développeurs sur la plateforme Steamworks, qui offrent un bon indicateur de l’engagement des studios. N’hésitez pas à partager vos observations futures sur son impact à plus long terme.
The console market is effectively over. Exclusives no longer drive sales or hardware like they once did, and even Sony has acknowledged this.
Microsoft is merging Xbox back into Windows PC, opening the hardware to OEMs and the operating system to other storefronts, essentially making it just another PC platform.
Steam OS mostly runs Windows PC games on Linux, and the new Steam hardware is underpowered compared to current consoles, with a smaller GPU and only 8GB of VRAM.
Sony releasing their exclusives on PC was a significant indicator that the console market is struggling.
While Sony has sold many consoles, the hardware has always had thin margins or was sold at a loss initially, with profits coming later as manufacturing costs decrease.
With the decline of in-house hardware over a decade ago and consoles now being semi-custom AMD x86 PCs, the shift toward multi-platform strategies has been inevitable for years.
Is it possible to compete with Sony in the console market? Yes, but it’s unlikely. The best opportunities would be for Xbox to improve its strategy, though they seem focused on a different direction, or for a Steam machine to succeed.
Valve’s window for a Steam machine is closing. Their best opportunity was during the PS4 and Xbox One generation. There may have been a brief opening after recent price increases, but time is running out with the PS6 launch approaching, assuming Sony executes it well.
It’s not true that competing is impossible. They’ve reached a point where the OS and Proton are ready. All they would need is a more powerful version of the Steam Deck.
I agree. Steam is in a strong position and doesn’t need to rush. They’ve been developing Steam OS for a while, and it’s quite good. With their dominant market share in PC gaming, they just need to release a solid console and it will sell extremely well—especially since many people dislike Windows.
Why choose a Steam Machine over an Xbox when the next generation of consoles will be essentially the same?
Xbox sees its future in streaming. While it may have been overlooked, all Game Pass options now include streaming, and they’ve also added the ability to stream games you own. They will continue to sell hardware, such as the Series X blades used for xCloud, but it won’t be their main focus. In this case, Valve is simply ahead of Microsoft.
The next Xbox console will likely resemble a ROG NUC with branding, as hinted by devices like the ROG Ally and Quest 3.
Functionally, no. As Xbox continues to diminish, Sony will have a monopoly in the traditional home console market. However, I wouldn’t necessarily call it a monopoly, since Sony essentially did nothing but outcompete their rival—which amounted to doing very little.
Yes, and you actually want it that be that way.
You need a large company with massive financial resources. Everything is expensive: online infrastructure requires a dedicated department, and developing an operating system is costly. Hardware is the simplest part; convincing developers to support your platform is much harder. If you release a generic system, it will be more expensive than a purpose-built console that’s cheaper than a PC and nearly as powerful—so you’d lose immediately.
However, as Google demonstrated with Stadia, you also need bold vision. You won’t compete with Sony right away; building a user base takes time unless you’re significantly cheaper than the competition.
Competing with Sony in the console market is not practical under shareholder economics. No company would attempt it without expecting returns within a few short years. Shareholders would not accept losing money for 10 to 15 years for a chance at becoming competitive.
The only company that could realistically challenge Sony in the console market is Valve, but I don’t see that happening for a few reasons.
First, Valve is already highly profitable in its own space, and Gabe Newell appears more focused on creating unique hardware like the Steam Deck and VR headsets than entering the console wars.
Second, Sony holds a strategic advantage with Project Amethyst, a collaboration with AMD that uses AI to develop cost-effective, high-performance hardware. Competing with a future console like the PS6 would likely require much higher investment from any rival.
As for other players: Amazon is winding down its gaming division, Nintendo thrives by focusing on its own IP, and Microsoft seems to be shifting toward cloud gaming and broader accessibility for its titles.
I’m primarily a console gamer and plan to stay that way, but the market is increasingly difficult to profit in. Only Sony and Nintendo are succeeding, which is why new competitors are staying away—entering now almost guarantees financial loss.
The only companies I could see entering the console market are:
Nvidia could launch its own $500–600 ARM-powered console, avoiding competition with its high-end GPUs. With an existing user base on GeForce Now, they could easily introduce a full store and likely see strong adoption, provided it runs its own OS instead of Windows.
Nvidia and Intel might partner, given their recent collaboration. Intel reportedly lost the PS6 contract to AMD, so joining forces could help share the risk.
Apple already has the store, customer base, and dedicated fans, plus capable chips. Even current phones can run some AAA games. A gaming-specific M6 chip with extra graphics cores in an Apple TV-style box, paired with an Apple Arcade subscription, would likely attract developers and be a major success.
Tencent dominates PC and mobile gaming with hugely popular titles and substantial financial resources, making a console launch feasible.
Other Chinese companies like Xiaomi, ByteDance, Alibaba, or Huawei could also enter using domestic technology and chips. With China recently easing some gaming restrictions, even a domestic-only console could become the best-selling of all time.
I don’t see anyone wanting to invest that much money. The console market only works well if you’re the market leader. You’d have to spend excessively to build a large enough user base to compete, which is why we haven’t seen any new entrants except for Microsoft with its deep pockets.
Any newcomer would need billions to launch and even more to fund exclusive content. They’d likely reach the same conclusion as Microsoft: it’s more profitable to leverage existing platforms like Sony’s, Nintendo’s, PC, and mobile.
Apple could have made an impact if they had entered the market around 2015 with a hybrid handheld similar to the Switch.
Apple is not competing with Sony; they are collaborating with them.
Apple has never shown much interest in understanding the gaming industry.
Microsoft, on the other hand, has been deeply involved for decades—from early games in the 80s, to developing foundational technology in the 90s, to launching the Xbox and pioneering online console gaming in the 2000s. They have both the resources and expertise, yet appear to have lost their drive.
I believe this stems from leadership under Satya Nadella, who seems focused solely on maximizing profit margins and cutting anything that doesn’t promise massive returns. Even if Microsoft achieved Nintendo-level success, Nadella might still question its $4 billion annual profit, given that Microsoft earns five times that in a single quarter.
Agreed.
Nadella has been highly profitable for Microsoft, so they’ll continue following his vision. I understand not wanting to waste money competing directly in consoles, but imagine if they implemented AI to reduce overhead while reassigning employees to different units or splitting dev teams into smaller groups instead of resorting to layoffs.
That’s where it becomes clear these are Nadella’s questionable decisions.
It’s surprising to realize I actually miss Microsoft during the Ballmer era.
Xbox stumbled by focusing on everything except gaming. The 360 was great, but afterward, it felt more like a set-top box or Apple TV than a gaming console. It doesn’t embody gaming the way PlayStation does. It tried to be a streaming device, a Wii, and now it’s trying to be a PC—that’s not what we buy it for.
Competing directly with Sony in the console market, like Xbox once did, is unlikely. The market for that specific demographic isn’t large enough to support multiple similar consoles. However, you can compete by differentiating your platform with unique features or exclusives, which explains the success of Steam and the Switch. But creating something that’s essentially a PlayStation under a different brand isn’t feasible.
Currently, there are two dominant consoles in the market, with Xbox also being a notable presence.
The PS5 is currently outselling Xbox by a ratio of eight to one.
Nintendo and Sony dominate the console market, while Xbox is merely present.
Xbox holds about a third of the North American market, which, while placing it last by a significant margin, is still a notable share. This presence ensures they maintain equal third-party support with PlayStation and even surpass Nintendo in this regard.
Many companies attempt to launch new game consoles, but most fail or remain niche. To seriously compete with established players, you need compelling exclusives, ideally a competitor’s misstep to exploit, and the ability to scale production for affordability. Few companies have the resources and willingness to take such a risk.
There is no such thing as a PC/hybrid console. It’s essentially a branded PC that offers controller-friendly tablet-style interfaces, similar to what Surface PCs provided a decade ago. The architecture of consoles and PCs has been similar enough since the Xbox One and PS4 era, so there’s little need for extra optimization on PC. The main reason developers don’t ignore weaker systems is that consoles still have a large user base, and many PC gamers use $600 setups that perform comparably to current-generation consoles.
A PC console hybrid can function both as a console, playing games made specifically for it, and as a PC. For example, the original PS3 allowed users to install another operating system, enabling it to work as a PC. The ROG Ally X is not that; it’s just a PC attempting, and failing, to deliver a console experience.
What you’re describing is similar to the kind of platform-specific optimization that Mac and iPhone currently receive, where developers recode software to run on hardware it otherwise wouldn’t. However, this approach is rarely used today unless a game genuinely won’t run on a platform. Game engines generally aren’t designed to target GPU functions unique to one system, because squeezing out minor performance gains isn’t worth the effort for most developers, especially given the tight budgets and long development times in game development. The main exception is the Switch, due to its different architecture (ARM vs x86-64).
Porting games between PC and consoles is now straightforward and mostly involves adapting the settings menu. The Switch remains an exception because ARM CPUs use different instruction sets. If you’d like more detail, I can explain the computer architecture principles involved, but the core issue is that the main barrier to PC games appearing on consoles is simply a lack of developer support.
Competition only works when it’s balanced, like the 360 and PS3 era. If one side makes major mistakes, they lose ground, as Xbox did. This generation has been particularly damaging. When you become complacent, you fall behind. For example, failing to introduce a new user interface, releasing an unattractive black console, and reusing the same controller from the previous generation doesn’t impress consumers. In contrast, the PS5 feels like a meaningful upgrade from the PS4. Beyond speed, there’s little to distinguish the Xbox One from the Series consoles.
Nintendo appears to be managing well in its own market space.
If anyone can get VR or light guns right at an affordable price, it might be possible. A standard console that sits under your TV and plays games probably won’t succeed, but something unique that gains mass market appeal, like the Wii, could have a chance.