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Long lines in Japan greet PlayStation 3

By ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published November 11, 2006


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TOKYO - Sony's PlayStation 3 made its highly anticipated debut in Japan to long lines today, marking the first launch of the video game console that's expected to become a global sellout.

Throngs of people lined up for hours around Bic Camera, an electronics retailer in downtown Tokyo, to get their hands on one of the consoles. The enthusiasm was so great, clerks with bullhorns asked the crowd to stop pushing, warning that all sales would end if there were any injuries.

"Standing in line today is the only way to make sure I got one," said Takayuki Sato, 30, among the buyers who queued up at Bic Camera, snaking a line around the building.

But would-be buyers were turned away even before the store opened at 7 a.m. The retailer refused to say how many machines it had, but said it knew it would sell out based on the length of the line around the building.

Short supplies were reported elsewhere, too. Sanae Saito, a clerk at the Yodobashi Camera Co. chain, said her store's stock had already sold out, although she declined to say how many machines were available.

"It's all sold out with the people in line now," she said.

Plagued with production problems, Sony Corp. has only 100,000 PlayStation 3 machines in time for its debut in Japan. When it goes on sale in the United States on Friday, about 400,000 PS3 consoles will be available. The console's European launch has been pushed back until March.

Powered by a new computer chip and supported by the next-generation Blu-ray video disc format, the console delivers nearly movielike graphics and a realistic gaming experience.

Sony will be losing money for some time on each PS3 sold because of the high costs for research and production.

[Last modified November 10, 2006, 23:40:03]


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