Well fair enough, but are you suggesting people get the games for nothing? A PS3 needs games to be useful. One new-release PS3 game a month costs significantly more than a month's line rental and 'consumer' broadband. OK, you can buy second hand or 'platinum' but even then the cost of a platinum game is roughly equal to the cost of one month's line rental + cheapest possible broadband. I maintain my position - the cost of ownership of a PS3 is by no means less than the cost of broadband.
Broadband only. OK, concrete example - talk talk will give you their basic 'connect' service for £7 a month, plus £10 a month line rental, so £17 a month overall. 17*12 = £204. Near as damnit the same as a PS3 with no broadband and no games which, let's be honest, isn't a whole lot of use. Let's try a more 'back of beermat' but real world example. Let's go over three years, TCO.
PS3 :
200 quid for the PS3, plus say a game every two months, half of which are 'full price' (£40) and half of which are 'platinum/second hand price' (£15). So, 3 of each a year. TCO of a PS3 = 200 + (3((40*3)+(15*3)) = £695.
3 year's broadband - 17*36 = £612
if my arithmatic is correct.
Honestly, unless you very rarely buy a game for that PS3 you own, broadband isn't more expensive than a PS3. It just isn't. In fact, buying the broadband can in fact reduce the TCO of the PS3, since instead of having to buy 'shop' price games, you can buy games from the PSN -which tend to be priced below £10, where there are sale prices on products every month and some of the games are of equal or better quality than 'box' games. So you can offset the cost of broadband into your gaming habit if you like.
[/quote]That comment was more about the increase in broadband speed. I'm stuck with 2-meg unless I end the contracts on the phones (all according to orange).[/quote]
As I said though, I coped perfectly well playing PS3 online when my broadband connection was often 'only' 2mb/s. I didn't upgrade because of the PS3, I did that because it's useful for my job.
I'm sorry, but I stand by my position. If you can afford a PS3, you can afford broadband. It may not seem so, but the maths say it is.
Jon