Which handheld console to get and why

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I was recently talking with a friend about handheld consoles and from that discussion realized I should probably take a few minutes and type up an article here on what my recommendations would be for handheld gaming console purchases and why, so here goes...

In my friend's case, a friend of her husbands was talking about possibly getting her husband a Nintendo DS Lite handheld so that her husband would have a small gaming system that he could take with him and play while waiting on service calls and such.  Times when he might have to kill a few hours while waiting for parts to be delivered to a customer job site.  The friend was thinking that her husband might enjoy games like Brain Age, Brain Age 2 or Flash Focus which could help sharpen his mental skills, eye hand coordination, peripheral vision and such.  Not a bad thought, but I interjected that perhaps she should try to convince the friend to give serious thought to buying her husband a Sony PSP handheld instead.

Why the PSP over the Nintendo DS Lite?  Well, for me it comes down to what you can do with the two systems.  Nintendo pretty much pwnz the handheld gaming market.  Seriously they have such market share there that in many ways it is foolish to consider any other handheld gaming system...  then again, what type of games do they have on their console?  Oooops, that's the problem for Nintendo.  They have several educational type games, or games that can help provide stimulation for the mental faculty, but beyond that they are primarily a maker of youth oriented games on their system.  While there are a few games for the Nintendo DS that are aimed at a more mature player, the vast majority of Nintendo games are for the younger crowd.

On the PSP that games selection is probably no where near as deep as it is on the Nintendo DS or DS Lite system, but it is typically aimed at a more mature individual.  Teens and up, rather than on Nintendo typically aimed at teens and younger.  Games like SOCOM, or Rainbow Six Vegas and such.  The Grand Theft Auto games too (or variants of them) and more.  Along with some excellent puzzle type games like Lumines, Lumines 2, Luxor and others.

Add on top of that a built-in web browser that can be used to access the net if you can find a WiFi signal in your area.  Need to access something like Gmail or Yahoo! mail?  Fire up the browser on the PSP and have at it.

Finally, the bigger reason that I suggested a PSP to my friend (for her husband).  Movies and music.  Sony's PSP has a fair sized library of movies available on the UMD format.  At least enough to get yourself several favorites to keep available for times when you think you might be looking at 2 - 3 hour wait time at a customer site.  Pop in a favorite movie and enjoy it.  Worst case, you can 'rip' a DVD to your PC, convert/transcode it over to something that will play on the PSP (fairly easily) and roll-your-own videos that way (saving the cost of buying a movie you already own on DVD in the UMD format).  The PSP reads Sony's Memory Stick Pro Duo format, which you can normally find adapters/readers for to use with your PC.  (Or you can send files over to the PSP via it's mini-UMD connector that will connect the device to a PC).

On the music front, you can take music files over to the PSP giving yourself an MP3 player type device to listen to while you work.

I actually like both of these handheld console systems, though I no longer personally own a DS Lite.  I bought one shortly after they were released and then sold it just before last Christmas.  There was nothing wrong with the device except for one thing for my tastes -- not enough games I wanted to play.  Or at least not enough games that I wanted to play that weren't more expensive than I was willing to pay at the time.  I do currently own a PSP, the PSP 2000 (or is it 2001) model, the lighter 'slimline' model.  Definitely lighter and more comfortable to hold than it used to be.  I still wish it had joysticks on both sides of the device, but I understand why it doesn't currently offer such eatures and likely won't offer such options anytime soon.

If you are buying for a younger person, I would seriously consider, and probably recommend the Nintendo DS Lite.  It is a fine gaming system, but that is really all it is intended to be -- a gaming system.  For older persons (not old people, just older persons) I think the PSP is the right choice since it can be so much more than just a video game playing machine.

15,998 views 10 replies
Reply #1 Top
We have both. Adrian took the PSP to Iraq with him, though, because the titles fit his interests more and he can watch movies and store pics and music on it.

I played the DS for a little while but I handed it down to the boys because I got bored with it (and didn't have enough time to properly care for my Nintendogs anyways, haha).
Reply #2 Top
but beyond that they are primarily a maker of youth oriented games on their system.
I love my Nintendo portable timewaster. "Youth-oriented games" is just a another term for fun, cartoony games. I have Tetris, New Super Mario Brothers, Zelda Phantom Hourglass, and Mario Kart DS. I also have an SD card with a Linux installation, should I feel geky. I have seen the Sony and it seems like it mostly focuses on sports and racing games. And everything is taken so seriously. The Nintendo games make fun of themselves and the player, are nicely designed and surprisingly well-adapted to a touch screen interface. Phantom Hourglass is probably the best game I have playd in a long time. And New Super Mario was surprisingly super-excellent. I expected it to be good, but it kept surprising me. And then the Nintendo looks exactly like a smaller version of my Macbook. Everything is nice and neat.
Reply #3 Top

I love my Nintendo portable timewaster. "Youth-oriented games" is just a another term for fun, cartoony games. I have Tetris, New Super Mario Brothers, Zelda Phantom Hourglass, and Mario Kart DS. I also have an SD card with a Linux installation, should I feel geky. I have seen the Sony and it seems like it mostly focuses on sports and racing games. And everything is taken so seriously. The Nintendo games make fun of themselves and the player, are nicely designed and surprisingly well-adapted to a touch screen interface. Phantom Hourglass is probably the best game I have playd in a long time. And New Super Mario was surprisingly super-excellent. I expected it to be good, but it kept surprising me. And then the Nintendo looks exactly like a smaller version of my Macbook. Everything is nice and neat.

I'm not saying that there is no adult appeal to the Nintendo DS (or Nintendo DS Lite) and the games for it, but I am saying that in the end the games that make up the majority of it's library are aimed at a younger audience.  There's some cross appeal, and the games themselves can be very enjoyable for young and old alike.  The Mario series is a great example, and yes Tetris is a game that has appeal across the spectrum.  But then you see games like Zelda, Pokemon, and a host of others that are more for children and less for adults.

You are definitely also over generalizing when you say that the PSP focuses on sports and racing games.  There are FPS (First Person Shooters) games, puzzlers, side scrolling arcade action (like the game Exit), games like Lumines, Rayman, and a whole host of other games.  I don't think you can realistically point to the PSP library and say it's dominated by any one particular class of games.  I will say again though the games for it tend to be aimed at a more mature audience.  I think Sony has basically looked at the market place and figures that they can let Nintendo keep the kids market, or family market, while they go after the young adults and geeky adults that want something that can do a lot more.  See Texas Wahine's comments above about her husband and what machine he was working with while in Iraq -- a PSP 'because the titles fit his interests more and he can watch movies ....'  That was my point in writing the article here.  If you are a 20 - 30 something individual, or even a 40 - 50 something individual, you would probably find more value in the PSP in the longer run.

On the plus side for all consumers, prices for the PSP have come down over time.  From the early adopter wallet emptying high of $299 down to $199 and now down to $169 for the handheld by itself.  That compares pretty favorably to the Nintendo DS Lite at it's $129 price range.  Of course you'll likely want to grab a few accessories to go with the PSP and it'll sneak the price back up into the $199 range when all is said and done, but you'd do the same for the DS Lite and be up in the $169 range fairly quickly also (headphones, and other accessories and such).

Reply #4 Top
I bought a DS for my older son last Christmas. Of course, like everything else, he broke it so no more electronics for him till he shows more respect for them. I thought it was cool but not a gaming system for me. I get bored really quick with cartoony like games. I enjoy games like Call of Duty 2 and Need for speed so I need something with a bit more kick to it. I would love s PSP, with everything you mentioned plus all the home-brewed software out there for it, it seems like the best choice for an all in one portable media system.
Reply #5 Top
I think that it would be more accurate to say that the DS games are more likely to appeal to younger and casual gamers. I have a bunch of arcadey type games that I play when I don't want to invest a lot of time into playing (before bed, waiting in the doctor's office, etc) and I absolutely love them. My current addiction with the DS is PuzzleQuest, which I've almost finished. There are also the re-released games like Final Fantasy III which appeals to nostalgia gamers. There's also a browser for the DS.

Does the PSP let you beam games to another PSP so that you can play multiplayer even if your friend doesn't have the same game? I love that feature of the DS.

Reply #6 Top
The best handheld console is still an ordinary laptop because it runs GC2 ;)
Reply #7 Top
Zelda is an excellent game for adults. I enjoyed it thoroughly.
Reply #8 Top
I think that it would be more accurate to say that the DS games are more likely to appeal to younger and casual gamers


Casual gamers... yes, that's pretty much it. I (30) don't feel at home with most of today's video games. When I walk through the game department in a video store, only the Nintendo DS section feels like home. (The Wii is too family.) Everything else appears to be a collection of repetitive ego shooters, football games, and car racing games. And the teenagers and older who play them take them very seriously. I like the Nintendo DS because it doesn't take itself very seriously and has games that are clearly designed not to be taken seriously either.
Reply #9 Top
think Sony has basically looked at the market place and figures that they can let Nintendo keep the kids market, or family market, while they go after the young adults and geeky adults that want something that can do a lot more.


I don't know. I don't see Sony going after the geeky adults market at all. I am a geeky adult (30, work for software company, buy more Macintosh computers than I need, have a Windows PDA for no reason other than wanting it, need USB hubs to connect all my devices, bought a 1 TB hard disk just to try out Time Machine etc.) but I cannot find the Sony PSP at all convincing. I have met an engineer from HP on a plane to Tel Aviv and he had one though. But he was not so geeky, I thought.

Sony seems to be going after the typical gamer market. And these days most gamers don't seem to be geeks any more. In the 80s and early 90s you could walk up to most gamers and start a conversation about, say, the 68k CPU and they would join. Today, most gamers seem to be pure users of the offerings and not interested in the technology as such.

Maybe I am getting old.
Reply #10 Top
I recently sold my DS Lite for the PSP Slim. Best thing i've done in a while. The games are great, especially the graphics which were one of the drawbacks for the DS for me. The ability to browse the web, listen to music, watch videos, and view photos...plenty of reason to get a PSP aside from gaming