Essentials (PlayStation)

Sony PlayStation budget range From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Essentials is the Sony PlayStation budget range in the PAL region, which covers Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Australia and South Asia. It was launched in 1997 as the Platinum range[1] but was later renamed for PlayStation Portable, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita and PlayStation 4. After reaching the required level of sales, Sony often dropped the prices of the original title to Platinum pricing levels (generally about half of the original retail price), as a way to clear inventory for retailers. Similar budget ranges from Sony include the Greatest Hits and The Best labels for the North American and Japanese markets, respectively.

Official Platinum and Essentials banners used on PlayStation game covers

History and requirements

Platinum was introduced in March 1997 and the first titles under it were Air Combat, Battle Arena Toshinden, Destruction Derby, Ridge Racer, Tekken and Wipeout.[2][3] At launch, a game required a minimum of 100,000 sales across the PAL region and needed to have been on sale for at least one year before qualifying for a Platinum re-release. These criteria were later tightened, reducing the required time on sale to nine months while raising the sales threshold to 250,000 copies.[4] The threshold was subsequently raised again to 400,000 copies.[5][6]

As of 2006, the requirements were over 400,000 sales after six months on the PAL market.[7][8] Games that sell over 400,000 units in another region alone, such as Japan or the US, do not necessarily qualify for a Platinum title. For PlayStation Portable releases, the target is 400,000 unit sales required to achieve Platinum status.[9][8] As of 2008, any PS2, PSP or PS3 game that sold over 400,000 units on the PAL market qualified for Platinum status.[8]

The Platinum distinction has since been extended. Since 2010, it has been renamed Essentials for the PlayStation Portable, PlayStation 3, PlayStation Vita and PlayStation 4. The first PS3 titles were released on August 1, 2008, namely: Assassin's Creed, Heavenly Sword, MotorStorm, Ratchet & Clank Future: Tools of Destruction, Uncharted: Drake's Fortune and Virtua Tennis 3.[10]

For PlayStation 4 games the name was changed to PlayStation Hits. The first games under the new label were released on 18 July 2018 in PS Store and in retail stores for €19.99 / £15.99 each.[11][12]

Design differences

Platinum Range titles were recognisable by a platinum/silver coloured band on the game's casing, both the front and the spine. The PlayStation design used the same logo that was introduced in early 1997 for all PAL region game cases,[13] the differences being the colouring and that it indicates itself as Platinum. The PlayStation 2 design of the platinum games had a silver band to act as a border and to contain the game's original cover, which is shrunk to fill about 75% of the platinum cover. The early platinum games that were released prior to 2003 had the PlayStation logo repeated twice on the front case, once on the platinum border, and once on the original game's case. (with the original game's case dropping the PlayStation logo after 2002.) In 2005, a new featured layout was introduced; these have a black border, and silver outlines around the shrunken original game cover. There is also a red orb located at the bottom of the original game cover with the words Platinum The Best of PlayStation 2 and Platinum The Best of PSP (PlayStation Portable) for PlayStation 2 and PlayStation Portable games respectively. The platinum band can also be seen on the manual. The PlayStation 3 Platinum range box art replaces the black background of the PlayStation 3 logo on the left with a yellow background, and has the original box art shrunk slightly, with a grey border, and a yellow rectangle on top of it, with Platinum The Best of PlayStation 3 written on it.

PlayStation and PlayStation 2 platinum game discs do not feature any of the original game disc design; instead, it is replaced with a simple silver design – which, along with the copyright notices around the edges, features the game's name in the centre surrounded by a black outline. PlayStation Portable platinum games use the original UMD games' disc design whilst PlayStation 3 platinum games use the original disc design with a platinum design on the disc.

List of Platinum range games

PlayStation titles

PlayStation 2 titles

PlayStation 3 titles

PlayStation Portable titles

List of Essentials range games

PlayStation 3 titles

PlayStation Portable titles

List of PlayStation Hits range games

PlayStation 4 (PAL)

References

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