Though this month is normally dedicated (on the internet, at least) to the annual skeleton war, every few years we redo that whole Battle of Koom Valley Sony versus Microsoft/PlayStation versus Xbox thing. There’s not quite the level of animosity and fanboyish in evidence in previous generations, because gaming’s come a long way since then, but there’s still… conflict. Rivalry. A little friendly banter, as each side, insists that it has the superior product. But there’s always a winner in every argument and it may not be who you’re expecting it to be.
Welcome to reality
The answer to that is only a surprise if you haven’t been paying attention for the past few months — Microsoft’s Xbox Series X has the superior hardware this generation. This isn’t wishful thinking or a biased opinion — the Series X has a slightly speedier processor but a considerably more powerful graphics card — fielding 12 teraflops to Sony’s 10.28. A larger SSD (though Sony’s choice is quicker, by far) makes it seem like the Xbox Series X would win any console war you care to name. But…
Wars are won in cyberspace
The data mostly concerns the American market, but that’s just one of a few similar battlegrounds. In terms of web traffic after pre-orders were announced, Sony’s console had a far larger increase in users heading to the company’s website looking for new gaming hardware. That doesn’t mean more sales, not really, but it does mean more interest. Sony’s website also garnered more organic web traffic over the pre-order announcement period.
Traffic to online retailers’ pages for the respective consoles told a similar story. While Microsoft’s console had its share of fans, Sony’s pages, whether it was on GameStop, Walmart, Best Buy or Target, spiked considerably higher than Microsoft’s did. Whether this is going to translate to higher sales than for Microsoft’s Xbox Series X is another story but, on this front, Sony’s winning.
The home front