Wednesday 30 July 2014

Sony passes on EA Access, calling PlayStation Plus a better deal

Sony passes on EA Access, calling PlayStation Plus a better deal

The PS4 was curiously left out of EA's newly announced subscription plan for the Xbox One and as it turns the Japanese electronics firm flat out rejected the idea.


Sony spokesperson told Game Informer that the company evaluated the EA Access subscription offer and concluded it did not bring the value PlayStation gamers expect compared to its own PS Plus service.


"Gamers are looking for memberships that offer a multitude of services, across various devices, for one low price," the Sony representative expounded. "We don't think asking our fans to pay an additional $5 a month for this EA-specific program represents good value to the PlayStation gamer."


Members club


Sony is somewhat justified in saying this, after all PS Plus lets gives adds two free games a month for each of its individual systems including the PS4, PS3 and PS Vita. For a $9.99 (£5.49, AU$9.95) monthly subscription PS Plus also grants players 3GB of online storage for save files, discounts on other items across the entire PSN store and access to online multiplayer on the PS4.


EA Access on the other hand charges $5.99 or £3.99 (about AU$5.31) and only has four games on tap – for now. EA also promises more games are on their way and gamers will also be able to save 10% when buying any EA product in the Xbox storefront.


So for now Sony has the advantage, when it comes to PlayStation Plus anyway.


PS No-w


Conveniently Sony happens to be on the cusp of launching PS Now, a streaming service that could butt heads with EA Access. From our own time with the service still in beta, PS Now is arguably the worst deal ever with many games priced at $2.99 (about £1.76, AU$3.21) for only four-hours of access.


If anything Sony is the one that could learn from EA's subscription plan, which provides better access in every way. Even if Sony can offer up more games, EA Access is an arguably better deal that lets gamers download full games rather than unreliably stream them over the web.

















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