Nvidia aims for late Q2 launch for oject Shield hheld

BY GreenBot Staff

Published 19 Mar 2013


Nvidia hopes to make its ambitious break into the portable hheld gaming market in the next few months, the company’s CEO said Tuesday.

Speaking to analysts on the sidelines of the company’s annual developer conference, n Hsun Huang said he “hopes” the Shield will be available through retail outlets in the latter part of the second quarter.

The Shield was first unveiled at this year’s International CES in nuary. It looks like an oversize gaming controller combines an Android-based computer running his company’s Tegra 4 processor with a 5-inch display. It brings a more immersive gaming experience than Android phones can also run games via a home server.

Nvidia’s oject Shield gaming device

“This is a consumer electronics product,” he said in reaction to a question about how Nvidia will sell the device. “‘ll try to be modest at first, we have no expectations we expect you to have none, but we’re going to sell it for profit.”

Game device makers like Sony, Nintendo Microsoft typically sell hardware at a loss with the expectation of making a profit from ongoing sales of software.

th Shield, Nvidia has a different plan.

It expects the hheld will attract developers to produce better games for Android, some of which will appear in Nvidia’s Tegra Zone gaming app store. That, in turn, should help the Tegra ecosystem drive sales of cell phones based on Tegra.

Nvidia CEO n-Hsun Huang News Service
Nvidia CEO n-Hsun Huang

“‘re not the world’s best device manufacturer yet, we’re working with the world’s best device manufacturers, we’re working on getting the price down,” said Huang. “But it will be profitable, it will be nicely profitable.”

Nvidia’s plans are expected to be finely analyzed as they are further detailed because the console dedicated-hheld video games market is going through something of a slump at the moment.

Sales of consoles have fallen off, partly in anticipation of new ayStation Xbox devices coming this year. Dedicated-hheld device sales are down because of competition from cell phones. The latest data from N Group shows hardware sales in the U.S. totaled $244 million in February, down just over a third from the same month in 2012.