With HD DVD Dead, Will Blu-ray Prices Begin to Fall?

Tue Feb 19, 2008 11:38AM EST

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With HD DVD officially dead (RIP February 19, 2008), cynics are beginning to wonder whether we're in for a long road of inflated Blu-ray equipment prices.

After all, Blu-ray began its life as the expensive high-def format and it remains so today, defying all expectations that consumers would naturally prefer the budget alternative format. But is it possible that Blu-ray prices might actually start to fall soon?

The conventional wisdom holds that Blu-ray no longer faces competition from HD DVD, so it will be better able to resist price pressure. Well, let's look at the facts: Months of HD DVD fire sales basically did nothing to trim Blu-ray prices so far. If the Blu-ray camp had been worried about being seen as too expensive, those price cuts should already have happened.

And besides, Blu-ray has never really competed with HD DVD.

Oh, sure, the two formats have struggled for dominance, but the real enemy has always been regular, standard-definition DVD. Executives have already been aiming their battle at the DVD world, where players can be had as cheaply as $30, so if price competition is really on Blu-ray developers' minds, we're going to have to see some far bigger cuts, far faster than we have before.

But most importantly by far, inter-format competition has historically been of little importance in price wars of the past. The original CD and DVD players cost thousands of dollars, but prices of both plummeted quickly as the technology to make them improved and overall sales have gone upward, even in the absence of a competing format. Without the distraction of HD DVD nibbling at its side, Blu-ray manufacturers should finally be able to focus on improving quality and decreasing prices instead of out-marketing and out-spending the competition on exclusive deals.

As well, with the format war over, more companies should now enter the market to produce Blu-ray gear and more consumers should sign up to buy said gear, further helping to depress prices as 2008 wears on.

The upshot is that, paradoxically, getting HD DVD out of the market could actually spur more innovation, increase production (as consumers finally get off the fence), and finally start pressuring down prices.

I could be wrong. This is a strange case where egos are involved, and Sony is so beat up by format wars of the past that it may be itching for a payoff this time around. Still, I'm still expecting big price cuts on Blu-ray for holiday 2008.

Comments on With HD DVD Dead, Will Blu-ray Prices Begin to Fall?

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  • 106 Posted by slicknick610 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    Everybody is wasting their money on blue-ray. Playing right into their hands. 5 years ago DVD was supposed to be untopable. Now blue-ray whats next. I do not really care about quality that much to see how many freckles are on the actors faces. As long as the picture is clear that is all I care about. And like someone else said what about the older movies they can't refilm them. They can only look so good. A lot of the older movies on dvd still have those little white dots on the screen. You want a Blue-ray version of a movie like that because i dont.

  • 107 Posted by mendayh32 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:16PM EDT Report Abuse

    It sound like alot of you who can't tell much of a diff between HD and standard upscaled dvd need to go buy new tv's. 720P/1080i rear projection tv's arent going to show you much of a difference between the two. As you upgrade your tv to the latest and greatest full LCD 1080P tv's you will notice a bigger difference. I was watching a blu-ray on a new sony LCD tv the other day and it about made me sick. Like you were looking through an open window. Of course the tv was $2800 bones. Thank you warner bros for screwing HDDVD. Now im forced to buy a PS3.

  • 108 Posted by dragoonmaster1781 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    Wow, Im glad I didnt buy that HD-DVD drive for my 360, hopefully Microsoft will make a Blu-ray drive for it, I really dont wanna buy a PS3 or that expensive Blu-ray player.

  • 109 Posted by david.dcosta on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:37PM EDT Report Abuse

    I got a Blu-ray player for $300, Samsung brand, pretty decent quality if you get a unit that actually works. I am happy with it. I don't think anyone should spend more than that on a Blu-ray player. Now that Blue-ray has won the format war, the consummer still have the power to drive prices down. Do not buy a Blu-ray player until it reaches the price YOU want! The player I bought sells for $400 but the retailer wanted to boost Blu-ray sales for the holiday season and dropped the price, and gave me 4 Blu-ray movies of my choice free. I've had the player for over 3 months now and it works great.

  • 110 Posted by webwriter3000 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:42PM EDT Report Abuse

    For those who don't know, Blu-Ray was so named by sony changing the color of the laser to blue because the color blue has a smaller wavelength than red and can be focused down to a smaller point than the standard DVD players that use a red laser. The name Blu-Ray came about because they had to spell it differently so they could patent the name. Evidently they couldn't patent the "BLUE" part of the name. Though the BD disks were more expensive than HD-DVD disks, BD or "Blue-Ray Disk" offered a higher capacity than HD-DVD. A single layer BD disk could hold about 25gigs while a single layer HD-DVD disk could only hold about 15gigs hence making the BD disk slightly higher cost. I'm looking forward to the time when you can get a BD Player for around $100, I want a BD DVD-R Burner for my computer, but they still run about $300.00 on either Tigerdirect or Newegg. If you already know all that I have just pointed out, then just ignore this post. But at least get the Acronym right. It's "BD" It's not "B-R" or "BR". Thank you for you time.

  • 111 Posted by drawnpaint on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:48PM EDT Report Abuse

    WooHoo! My family's Christmas present this year was a PS3. It plays our DVD's, our home movies burnt on CD, videogames & BluRay. It came with a mail in certificate for 6 BluRay Movies. We just upgraded our TV to a 46" Samsung. (old 28" Toshiba finally died RIP) Best buy had a special with our TV purchase & we received 5 BluRay movies. Cartoons are the most fun to watch in BluRay with my family. The colors, textures & depths are awesome!

  • 112 Posted by bhill69@sbcglobal.net on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:06PM EDT Report Abuse

    I have seen Hd on screen and i have seen blue-ray on screen and truthfully the hd had way better cleaner picture quality. Let me explain sonthing to you low tech people who think your getting the better bargin with blue-ray. Years ago Vhs was fresh on the market and visual quality was decent for that, but as they tried and tried to compress more video on that tape the quality dropped and dropped. Blue-ray allows you to put more on that disc but with a price can you guess what that is? Its the picture quality which degrades the more you compress it down in size. A full formated movie on Hd has and will always look better then blu-ray even stsndard dvds seem to look cleaner then blue-ray. I can promise you that over the next 2 to 3 yrs your going to see a massive drop of people using blue-ray or even purchasing it because the smart ones know there going to get screwed buying a over rated peice of crap.

  • 113 Posted by bustygirlforyou on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    For cryin out loud, if you don't have the right tv it won't show properly, just look at a blockbuster kiosk, i'm not saying buy necessarily, just see for yourself, so you can actually make an educated opinion based on your own perception, not on the opinions of others.

  • 114 Posted by bustygirlforyou on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    by the way post 125 your post proves that you are low tech, go watch your vhs tapes in peace, t3

  • 115 Posted by bustygirlforyou on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:15PM EDT Report Abuse

    oops, the smart ones stay with current technology and greatly enjoy their leisure time rather than whining about advancing technology, remember beta? looks like hd dvd is the new beta. no contest.

  • 116 Posted by thomassmailus on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    Now that HDDVD is out of the way, its true that BD makers can focus on production of their products. Conventional wisdom dictates that over the next year or two, the producers will move down the improvement curve, trimming production costs, and so we should see prices come down... but only after enough BD players have been produced and sold to allow the manufacturers to learn/improve their production technology. The big cost driver with BD is that the technology is so drastically different from DVD that little of the factory equipment can be used in creating BD media, and I'm sure similar whole-sale improvements would need to take place in the optical assembly construction of the players, where much tighter tolerances are needed. I'll stick with my DVD player for now and look at BD players in a year.

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