End of an Era: OPPO Digital Announces Its Retirement

End of an Era: OPPO Digital Announces Its Retirement

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(OPPO Digital)
(April 3, 2018) The market has spoken: OPPO Digital plans to stop manufacturing products. The company has spent the last 14 years leading the disc player segment, producing the industry’s best DVD, Blu-ray, and 4K UHD Blu-ray players. Many of the models have been celebrated by home theater enthusiasts and audiophiles alike, largely due to their ability to play nearly any disc format available, including SACDs.

While generally regarded as pricey, OPPO’s players have collected universal praise for parts selection and build quality, in addition to resoundingly superior customer support. In fact, the company’s legendary industry status was largely built upon quick firmware updates and friendly customer interactions.

In recent years, OPPO has branched into Hi-Fi audio realms, releasing several different planar magnetic headphones, audiophile DACs, and its well-reviewed Sonica wireless speaker.

According to OPPO’s blog announcement, the company is planning to “gradually stop manufacturing new products.” And for those new and existing customers, the company will continue to support warranties, offer repair services, and issue firmware updates “from time to time.” OPPO says that its UPD-203 and UDP-205 4K Blu-ray players are the most likely candidates to receive firmware upgrades in the months ahead.

Buyers that have purchased an OPPO product during the last 30 days can still return their purchase for a full refund.

Ultimately, this is an incredibly sad day for fans of disc-based media, highlighting the fact that the CD and Blu-ray market is in serious distress. Warning signs have been abundantly present, however, headlined by Best Buy’s recent decision to cease in-store compact disc sales this summer. And, according to the Digital Entertainment Group, disc sales fell 14% last year while revenue generated by rentals slid 17%. The future is obviously subscription-based streaming, which officially surpassed physical media’s sales dominance during 2016. Add to that the looming rollout of HDMI 2.1 and the potential for 8K media in the coming years, and one has to wonder if any company will have success conjuring healthy sales as new players are needed to meet technology demands.

I’ve reached out to OPPO with a few questions and will update this article as more information becomes available.


Editor's Note:

OPPO kindly replied to our request for additional information. The company contact re-itterated that the news is a "sad announcement for all us involved," and confirmed that the company's choice to cease production is largely due to sales numbers simply not supporting the long term viability of the business. It was added that a rather complex web of factors have contributed to the situation.

The company is actively building its last batch of products and predicts that its store front will remain stocked through June or July. OPPO chose to go public with its decision now so that it has the proper staff on hand to service its customers, which clearly fits with its long history of amazing customer service. It's expected that product support will extend for several years into the future.
 
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Just my opinion, I rarely buy mainly for purposes of future support. If it is a product I like, I buy it for its features and capabilities. In a few years, industry and technology can change so much that I would probably buy something different anyway.
 
I agree with AudiocRaver.. Buy for today the best you can get. .In the future, something better will come.. Always the case. :)
 
I agree, even the Oppo players are not future proof, in 3 years they will be obsolete other then their ability to play everything currently available now.
 
When I bought my Oppo in 2013, it was the best (and still is) and when it is time to get a new unit, I will get what is the best at that time.. :)
 
Everyone of you has helped.

I thank you

I have decided to go along with many of your opinion's and that is: Not to pick up an extra Oppo. Oppo is the best now but in three years, if my Oppo dies, I'll get the best at that time which could make now's Oppo over the hill.

I'll add an extended Oppo warranty which will take me out a few years and that should do it.

I was impressed with Oppo's customer service. I had a problem with my 203. Oppo sent me a pre-paid postage. I placed the 203 into the mail on Friday, it was delivered to Oppo that Monday and Oppo returned it back next day, Tuesday, fixed by replacing the optical unit.

With C.S. like that I will feel relaxed with their warranty and the quick response if something goes wrong again.


.
 
Oppo is well known for the awesome customer service. Wish other companies had the same..
 
I personally think (and who knows I'm not an expert, just a fan) that Oppo could have survived this by keeping the streaming features in the Bluray players ensuring that it remained a truly "universal" playe. A better processor would have gone a long way as it just makes sense to me to stream TIDAL, Pandora, or YouTube from my Oppo, which have superior DAC's and as I feel we've seen recently better 4K processing than most AVR's.
 
Future Proofing - good points, streaming capability might have helped. They were trying to go in that direction with the Sonica products, which had Tidal capability, but adding those features to the blu ray players might have helped, too.

Some days I wish someone would future proof ME.
 
I really hated this too. Just when I went to go buy a 205 two days ago I find out about this.

I'm not overpaying some 2400 just because they quit making them.
 
I personally think (and who knows I'm not an expert, just a fan) that Oppo could have survived this by keeping the streaming features in the Bluray players ensuring that it remained a truly "universal" playe. A better processor would have gone a long way as it just makes sense to me to stream TIDAL, Pandora, or YouTube from my Oppo, which have superior DAC's and as I feel we've seen recently better 4K processing than most AVR's.

OPPO saw the inclusion of streaming to be a redundancy with so many services offered through sticks and on other devices. Also, an added cost for firmware updates, etc.

You’re right, if they had offered Hi-Res streaming, it would have been nice. Ultimately, though, the market for physical media is quickly falling apart, and that’s the market OPPO made cash supporting.
 
I have really no knowledge regarding streaming audio

Right now I am hard wired to a 4K Roku through my Denon X7200WA to the surrounds

Are you saying, the audio would be better if the 203 had a Netflix app and was able to stream through the Oppo to the Denon vs the Roku to the Denon?
 
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Well, I just ordered a UDP-203. I don't need it yet, but I will eventually. I trust them enough to support it for a respectable time frame. The thing that really tipped the scales was taking a look at the resale value of my BDP-103, which seems to have spiked as well, with the news. So I'll be listing that on eBay when the 203 arrives and, if recent sales are an indicator, I'll be able to recoup about 80% of the cost of the 203 by the sale of my 103. Not a bad investment, really.
 
My HA-1 has a broken USB connector on the rear panel, better get it sent in for repair!
 
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