Latest News
spacer View All spacer
 
February 9, 2010
 
Analysts: EA On The Right Track At Last
 
E3 2010 Registration Opens As Major Exhibitors Confirmed
 
Ubisoft Q3 Sales Edge Down, As It Ramps Up Big Franchises
spacer
Latest Features
spacer View All spacer
 
February 9, 2010
 
arrow Television, Meet Games
 
arrow Two Halves, Together: Patrick Gilmore On Double Helix [1]
 
arrow The Road To Hell: The Creative Direction of Dante's Inferno [20]
spacer
Latest Blogs
spacer View All     Post     RSS spacer
 
February 9, 2010
 
Fixing the GDC 2010 Schedule Builder
 
Lineage 2 Interview - 'Freya Update Is Just a Beginning' - Pt.2
 
Swashbuckling for Landlubbers: Why you may already be encouraging piracy! [19]
spacer
Latest Jobs
spacer View All     Post a Job     RSS spacer
 
February 9, 2010
 
Ubisoft San Francisco
Core Engineer
 
Ubisoft San Francisco
Gameplay Engineer
 
Vicarious Visions / Activision
Audio Programmer
 
Rockstar North
Senior Graphics Programmer
 
Flashpoint Academy
Game Development and Animation Teachers
 
Ubisoft San Francisco
Network Engineer
 
Telltale Games
Senior Game Designer
 
Irrational Games
Multiplayer Level Designer
spacer
About
spacer News Director:
Leigh Alexander
Features Director:
Christian Nutt
Editor At Large:
Chris Remo
Advertising:
John 'Malik' Watson
Recruitment/Education:
Gina Gross
 
Feature Submissions
About
spacer If you enjoy reading this site, you might also want to check out these Think Services sites:

Game Career Guide (for student game developers.)

Indie Games (for independent game players/developers.)

Finger Gaming (news, reviews, and analysis on iPhone and iPod Touch games.)

GamerBytes (for the latest console digital download news.)

Worlds In Motion (discussing the business of online worlds.)

Game Set Watch (the Group's alt.game weblog.)
News

  Report: Sony Planning Simpler Approval, Lower Price For Some Downloadable PSP Games
by Leigh Alexander
3 comments
Share RSS
 
 
July 14, 2009
 
Report: Sony Planning Simpler Approval, Lower Price For Some Downloadable PSP Games
Advertisement
Sony's made no secret of the fact that it's aggressively courting developers to its PSP platform, and to that end, it's simplifying the content pipeline and approval process for games on the platform.

The company's already cut the price of PSP devkits, and now reveals to UK website Develop that it will no longer require concept approval, offer shorter quality assurance processes, and allow low price points for some new titles.

According to the report, Sony's already signed on 50 studios, including iPhone developer Subatomic Studios (Fieldrunners) and casual game company CandyStand, to work on "top-end" gaming experiences -- as well as "new initiatives for the PSP which take it beyond traditional gaming, but still include elements from gaming."

The list of creators making downloadable PSP games for this particular "specially-branded, separate area of the PlayStation Store" for PSP and PSP Go include India's Gameshastra and Creat Studios, a U.S. company with an office in St. Petersburg, Russia.

With the unveiling of the download-only PSP Go, unveiled at E3 and launching this fall, Sony looks to be seriously confronting Apple's rapid advance on the handheld gaming space by offering a diversity of gaming content available digitally.

The online game locker for PSP downloads will work in a similar way to Apple's iTunes, and Sony also often hints at non-gaming applications for the device.

Apple makes its SDK publicly available, and Sony doesn't plan to take such a step. But in reducing costs and simplifying approval process, it's clearly trying to attract a broad slate of developers to its new platform, while still maintaining a standard of quality inherent in the investment of a professional development team.
 
   
 
Comments

Ben Rice
profile image
Please, please keep the shovelware gates closed. I'm sure we are all for great games from smaller independent developers, but for god's sake, we don't need an appstore with 98% junk.

Kouga Saejima
profile image
Very good! By keeping it with costs it will only appeal to people who really want and will actually make a game. But I still hope that it won't be only available to companies. There are enough indies that haven't established companies.

Mark Venturelli
profile image
Great job! How about some love for Brazil? We sure could use a PSP Go! launch around here, alongside the official PS2. With downloadable games, it would dodge piracy really well. Hope someone at Sony is thinking about it.


none
 
Comment:
 


Submit Comment