@kspraydad, to clear up the questions, sales of the updated PSP will be considered part of the existing PlayStation Portable (PSP) stock.
It appears the main differences is that the PSP is now a third thinner and lighter due to a smaller battery. It features more flash memory--supposedly to run UMDs faster. The Wi-Fi button has been moved to the top of the device. The D-pad is more responsive.
I would consider these changes to be remedies for the flaws of the original design and not a new console. Sony does not appear to be marketing this as a new portable console.
I think the brightline with these things should be fairly obvious. If every gaming site rolls the thing into an existing console tab rather than create a new one, it is considered the same console. You will notice separate sections for GBA and Nintendo DS, but not one for Nintendo DS lite.
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It appears the main differences is that the PSP is now a third thinner and lighter due to a smaller battery. It features more flash memory--supposedly to run UMDs faster. The Wi-Fi button has been moved to the top of the device. The D-pad is more responsive.
I would consider these changes to be remedies for the flaws of the original design and not a new console. Sony does not appear to be marketing this as a new portable console.
I think the brightline with these things should be fairly obvious. If every gaming site rolls the thing into an existing console tab rather than create a new one, it is considered the same console. You will notice separate sections for GBA and Nintendo DS, but not one for Nintendo DS lite.