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Report: PS3 Leads 17 Percent Of U.S. Households To Blu-Ray Ownership

This year, the number of households owning at least one Blu-ray disc player has doubled since 2008 -- as of July 2010, 17 percent of American homes have one, thanks in no small part to PlayStation 3 consoles.

Leigh Alexander, Contributor

September 30, 2010

2 Min Read
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This year, the number of households owning at least one Blu-ray disc player has doubled since 2008 -- as of July 2010, 17 percent of American homes have one, thanks in no small part to PlayStation 3 consoles. Although the number represents less than one household in five, it's still higher than the U.S. penetration of Netflix, which is about 15 percent, reports Home Media Magazine, citing a new report from market intelligence firm Centris. A considerable 20 million U.S. households own both a Blu-ray player and a DVD player, according to the report. Among those Blu-ray owners, though, 45 percent have a stand-alone player -- and 47 percent watch those discs on a PS3. PS3 once had almost a two-to-one advantage over stand-alone Blu-ray players, a gap that's closed over the past six months. The addition of a Blu-ray drive to the PS3 was initially somewhat controversial. Many consumers questioned the demand for a Blu-ray drive in the face of the PS3's unprecedentedly high launch price, but when HD-DVD players retired from the format war and the console's cost came down, the issue became far less-discussed. Centris' report suggests that the PS3 was actually one of the primary drivers of Blu-ray adoption in the home, and that the format will have to expand beyond the PS3 audience if Blu-ray players are to see continuing growth. DVD is still the primary format for video rental, the report continues. However, it also finds that those who own Blu-ray players are more active video consumers, renting and buying discs in higher numbers. Much of that Blu-ray audience is "younger, wealthier households with children," it says, which might explain the finding that Blu-ray households are more likely to own an HDTV and a video game console, at 75 percent versus 62 percent of DVD households. "Although more Blu-ray households rented or purchase DVDs than they did Blu-ray discs, BD households actually rented or purchased more Blu-ray titles and DVD on average," says Centris' research.

About the Author

Leigh Alexander

Contributor

Leigh Alexander is Editor At Large for Gamasutra and the site's former News Director. Her work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Variety, Slate, Paste, Kill Screen, GamePro and numerous other publications. She also blogs regularly about gaming and internet culture at her Sexy Videogameland site. [NOTE: Edited 10/02/2014, this feature-linked bio was outdated.]

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