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Father Of PlayStation Recalls How Everyone At Sony Thought It Would Fail

Ken Kutaragi shares a memory about the PlayStation's doubters at Sony while celebrating the 25th anniversary of the console.

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During the early '90s, Ken Kutaragi and Sony attempted to collaborate with Nintendo on an early version of PlayStation, which was intended as a CD drive for the SNES. When that partnership faltered, Kutaragi and Sony moved forward with the original PlayStation in 1994. Although that system ultimately changed the entire video game industry, Kutaragi still recalls the doubters both inside and outside of Sony 25 years later.

"We wanted to share the passion," said Kuturagi at the Tokyo Games Show via VGC. "We wanted to hear their expectations and what they did not expect, so we wanted to hear from them. So we visited dozens of companies if not hundreds, we visited a lot of game makers. It was a great memory. They were not interested. They just said, 'Don't do it. There were multiple companies and none of them were successful. You are going to fail.' That's what they told us."

It's understandable why not everyone shared Kuturagi's passion for the project. When PlayStation entered the market, Nintendo and Sega were the only two dominant console-makers. Sony may have had more powerful hardware than the Genesis, the SNES, or the 32X peripheral, but Sega's Saturn was launching at right around the same time. And if that system had caught on like Sony's PS, then the console wars may have turned out very differently.

Microsoft had a similar experience in 2001 when it had to follow Sega's Dreamcast and PlayStation 2 into the market. Sega soon exited the console scene, leaving Sony, Nintendo, and Microsoft as the major players in the industry. Through four successive console generations, Sony remains one of the most dominant companies in video games. And it all started because Kutaragi and his team had a vision for the future of gaming.

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pillarrocks

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I remember getting a Playstation with Rascal, Rayman, WCW vs The World and Street Racer back in 1998. It came with a demo disc that had NFL GameDay 98 that blew my mind. I had always been a Nintendo kid and Sega kid and never heard of Sony Playstation before.

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judaspete

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It really was a big risk considering how fast the 3DO and Jaguar crashed and burned. I don't want to discredit the hard work and careful planning Sony did, but they also got lucky. Things could have turned out very different if Sega and Nintendo hadn't both made so many questionable choices that generation.

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Conosco1998

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Edited By Conosco1998

25th anniversary?

Can't wait to hear what Ken has to say when the 30th anniversary rolls around in a few minutes time...

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