More pointedly, a retail report published by Blu-ray.com has revealed that the price gap seemingly preventing Blu-ray from attaining an assured footing with consumers has taken a notable downward turn.
For example, online retail leader Amazon is now offering a great many of its Blu-ray titles for between $10 USD and $20 USD, which places the high-definition digital format just a few dollars adrift of widespread DVD prices.
For example, online retail leader Amazon is now offering a great many of its Blu-ray titles for between $10 USD and $20 USD, which places the high-definition digital format just a few dollars adrift of widespread DVD prices.
Good news for consumers, bad news for studios because the whole point of Blu-ray was to stop the falling prices of home video. What's the point of having a more expensive, harder to produce format that makes less money than DVDs?
But Blu-ray.com may be jumping the gun a bit, because Amazon is currently having lots of promotions (paid for by studios/Sony) to promote Blu-ray, and so prices may not reflect the wider market.
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