HD DVD vs. Blu-Ray: Which to buy and When to Wait

Posted on September 17th, 2007
By Erin Teeling in Other, Polls, Research, Technology

UPDATE (January 15, 2008): We now recommend choosing Blu-Ray over HD-DVD.

Please see our updated post here


When I began researching this post, I was aiming to write an article laying out the specifics of HD DVD and Blu-Ray, attempting to make sense out of this DVD format war. What are the advantages/disadvantages of each? Which should I buy? I discovered, however, the CNET already has those topics covered, with everything you never wanted to know about HD DVD and Blu-Ray in their Quick Guide. To avoid redundancy, I'm not going to repeat their expertise.  Instead, I'm going to take a different angle–figuring out what movie studios and dvd providers are working in which format, as well as the affordability of HD DVD and Blu-Ray players.  After all, these factors are what will probably influence most consumers' buying choices, rather than the actual technologies themselves.

Studios and Retailers

HD DVD Blu-Ray

First Look Studios

Sony Pictures
The Weinstein Company Blockbuster Stores
X Box 360 20th Century Fox
Universal Playstation 3
Viacom (Paramount, DreamWorks, MTV, Nickelodeon) Disney
  MGM
  Buena Vista
  Lionsgate
  Target will sell only Blu-Ray standalone players, but both formats in their DVD selections

On first glance, it may seem like Blu-Ray has a clear advantage here. But, It's important to keep in mind that Paramont has the largest market share (16.81%) and the highest gross ($1,193,497,557) of all the movie studios in 2007. So getting an exclusive deal with Paramount is big for HD DVD. Also, New Line Cinema and Warner Brothers appear to be supporting both formats.  Also noteworthy is that pornographic dvds will not be available in Blu-Ray, which could be a deciding factor for some.

The other big decision to make when talking about high-def DVDs is not not only what movies you will watch, but how you will watch them.  Here's a quick rundown of HD DVD and Blu-Ray players.

When comparing HD DVD and Blu-Ray players, you can quickly see that HD DVD players are more affordable than their Blu-Ray counterparts.  According to products listed on CNET.com, you can get an OPPO DV-970HD HD DVD player for $149 on Amazon.com.  Other affordable options are the Xbox 30 with an HD DVD player built in–you can find this for under $200 at several places online (view a comparison of cheaper HD DVD players here).  In addition, OPPO and Toshiba offer several other HD DVD players for under $300.  On the other hand, Toshiba and LG have some high-end options where you can spend almost $1,000 on an HD DVD player.

On the Blu-Ray side, you'll be hard-pressed to find a standalone player for under $500.  The most affordable option listed on CNET seems to be the Samsung BD-P1400 for $469.99 at Circuit City. 

The LG BH100, $849 at Circuit City, supports both HD DVD and Blu-Ray.  Get ready to run up your credit card if you want one of these.

Also noteworthy is the HP Pavilion m7690n is HD DVD-enabled for under $2,000.

So for people looking to pick a side in the DVD format war, things are pretty complicated. It seems that while Blu-Ray might have a larger current library of titles, HD DVD definitely has more viable options for high-def DVD players.  In this situation, I tend to agree with CNET–hold off on buying a high-def DVD player until the market becomes more stable.  If you really need a new DVD player now, I would recommend going with a cheap but good quality mainstream DVD players. These can be had quite easily for relatively little money, and thus serve as a great "transitional" DVD player for those who plan to go high-def in the future.  Sony has a lot of great low-priced options –I bought one last year and think it's fabulous.

[Poll=14]

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Comments

  1. Roger M. Moery

    Sony-I’m sick of them- beta, minidisc, memory stick, now bluray- I detest them like I do Apple- I won’t support companies that have business strategies that feel like monopolies and I vote with my money!

  2. Huligan

    Just wanna let you know that some of your HD DVD info is wayyy off. OPPO makes no HD DVD players, only very good upconverting standard dvd players. Also, the XBOX 360 doesn’t play HD DVD’s either, only when accompanied by a HD DVD attachment….still can’t figure out which one is going to win out….

  3. Darryl

    I so hope Sony wins this one. Why is Roger M. so sick of Sony?…they have lost out on beta, minidisc, etc, over the years. It’s their turn to win one for once, and they rightfully should because their format is superior. Give people the better format that holds more storage, and uses the blue lazer technology more accurately.
    We’ve been forced to go with inferior technology for years like VHS…Toshiba and gang are the ones I’m sick of, and everyone should be too. They have been monopolizing the market all these years.

  4. Josh Avery

    Sony Blu-ray all the way. Even the name alone is more awesome.

  5. Todd W Chisholm

    The next year should hopefully tell the tale, but I’m putting my money with Sony Blu-ray! 50GB of storage vs 30 … why are people even questioning it?

    Just go with Blu-ray!!!

  6. mike

    By Christmas 2007, Walmart is going to be selling HD-DVD players for $199. They recently partnered with Toshiba and Microsoft to sell the cheap players which will be built in China(big suprise).
    Most people are not videophiles. Price is the deciding factor when it comes to new technology, not technical ability.
    If Joe six pack can get a HD-DVD player for $199 or a blu-ray for $500, and BOTH play high definition movies, which one will he pick??….duh.
    The war is over, HD-DVD has won.
    As always, Walmart drives new technology with sheer market penetration and volume pricing.

  7. Alex Samuel

    HD! how many people have a dvd recorder, only on the pc perhaps, more people are going to get just a player and the size of hd discs are fine for that, blu ray is just to expensive,

    i bought a hd drivr for my laptop £73 where the blu ray was £180 more than twice as much, if people are worried about the war, the cheaper will win, why gamble more money on the toss of a coin?

    sony stuff is always overpriced!

  8. Tim Tringle

    Honestly, Guys like you are why it’s even more difficult for people to make an informed decision about buying an HD disc player.

    I have both formats and I actually prefer HD-DVD because my current Receiver cannot handle uncompressed PCM or Linear PCM for the high res audio formats so the Microsoft Add on for the 360 does a better job of providing me 1.5MB of audio goodness through it’s DTS downmixing.

    But you have already been informed that your blog is wrong yet you have done nothing to fix the fact that your saying OPPO has an HD-DVD player when this is absolutely UNTRUE! 30 seconds of research would clearly show that you were incorrect and that this doesn’t support either HD-DVD or BLU-RAY etc.

    Get your facts straight and stop adding to the confusion that surrounds these formats already. I constantly see incorrect information or outright lies on websites all the time now regarding these formats.

    Tim

  9. Confused

    I am right in thinking that a blue ray will not play your old standard DVD’S but the HD DVD player will and some will upscale to provide a better picture!!

    If this is right then Blue Ray will die a death very quickly.

    I consider myself a standard Joe Public. All I want is a Hi Def picture on my nice new 46 inch 1080p/i HD TV and get rid of my old dvd player. BUT i want to be able to still play old DVDS without having to have a sepaerate player. HD DVD will win the battle I think!

    I think the Consoles will decide the war this time around. The Porn industry decided it last time. Xbox 360 is now doing a deal where you get 5 HD DVD’s free with the HD DVD drive for the 360. This is a sneaky tactic and with Microsofts strangle hold on the market in comparison to the PS3 (not the wii but the wii does not support DVDS) I think I saw somewhere it is 10.5 million to 3.7 million HD DVD is sure to win. Offordability and flexibility will be the deciding factors.

    Current DVD disk cutting tech needs only a minor cheap amendment to be able to cut HD DVDs. To cut BluRay DVDS the whole cutting technology needs to be changed. This is costly and it takes longer to cut Blue ray disks then HDDVD disks. This is what is pushing the price up.

    Anyway I am going to go with HD DVD I think!

  10. PAUL ORELANS

    I don’t really care who wins this stupid battle, Just make an affordable HD/BLU RAY DVD player where we can wath movies without thinking about this nonsense battle.

    Same goes for DVD-R / DVD+R after many years we still don’t have a standard DVD format. so we have been using a cdrom that can play both format.
    this is my humble opinion.
    mucho thank you

  11. Greg

    I have a website where i write about news and about 6 months ago it looked as though Blu-Ray was on the winning end. I think this new contract with viacom and HD DVD will probably even out the playing field. I personally support Blu-Ray, but i am also slowly rethinking that. There is an upcoming backbencher to this whole war, and that is Holographic DVD. I think that if these two formats aren’t careful they will find each other in discount bin! But all we can do is wait see right!

about this blog

The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research and analysis on the web-based communications industry. TBR content is posted, created and managed by internet strategists, media/communications analysts, web developers, designers and programmers, all of whom are employees of The Bivings Group.

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