Arts PlayStation! shortage whets hardcore gamers appetite / BY MATTHEW HANSEN_ John Blanchard and Carlos Ramirez stepped up to the demonstration of Sony’s brand-new PlayStation 2 at Circuit City on Tuesday afternoon, and their reactions made it clear: This wasn’t your older brother's Nintendo. "Damn," Blanchard said, staring at the comput er-like graphics and DVD-quality picture of the PlayStation 2. “I’ve never seen any mtu^ thing like this." • *•“ Blanchard and Ramirez want one despite the $299 price tag. demand Thousands of Lincoln high school and University of Nebraska-Lincoln , , students have reacted similarly to has Doen Sony’s ad campaign, which high lights the quality of the system’s pic exponen- But everyone will have to wait “We’re sold out right now,” said tial. It has Rob Bruns, a media specialist at Best Buy. “The demand has been expo Koon nentiaL11 Las just been huge. It’s like De©n nothing I’ve ever seen.” The demand is exponential. The hllQ6. supply isn’t. Sony delivered only # ^ ’ 500,000 systems on the first day, half ... its promise of 1 million. It S UK© Many who had camped out in front of department and electronics nnthinn stores Lincoln hoping to be one of I iuu m the first to own a PlayStation 2 were turned away. They’re still without the I’ve ever game system. Sony hasn’t been able to make up coon n the difference in ensuing days. The Seen. company says the holdup is a glitch in one of PlayStation 2’s parts. Others Rob Bruns have speculated that PlayStation is trying to prolong the excitement of Best Buy the release, media specialist Either way, many are being I * forced to wait for what Bruns called an “incredible system,” the first to include a DVD player. What sets the PlayStation 2 apart is its picture. While Blanchard and Ramirez played “Madden 2000 Football,” the action looked more like the real thing than a conventional video game. Close-up r_m NateWagner/DN Rob Hage