At Sony, analysts estimate operating profit grew 10 percent in September-December versus the same period a year prior to 388 billion yen (2.71 billion pounds), with its games segment supported in recent quarters by a string of exclusive hit titles such as "Marvel's Spider-Man".

However with Sony's PlayStation 4 (PS4) console approaching its sixth year on the market, hardware sales have crested with the gaming unit's sales expected to peak in the current financial year ending March.

That has left investors eager for any hint from Sony, which announces its quarterly earnings on Friday, about a successor console seen by many analysts as hitting the market in late 2020.

"The PS4 is an absolute smash-hit and destroyed Sony's direct competition, Microsoft, in this console generation," said Serkan Toto, founder of Tokyo-based game industry consultancy Kantan Games, referring to Microsoft Corp's Xbox.

"Everyone is waiting for the PS5 now," he said.

Sony has said it is planning a follow-up device but has not provided details such as a name or timing.

Meanwhile there are signs Microsoft is planning a counter-attack with its growing focus on cloud gaming, where content is streamed to users.

That is seen by some in the industry as the future of video games and an area in which Microsoft has the advantage as a major cloud computing player.

SWITCHING GEARS

At Kyoto-based Nintendo, analysts estimate an almost 30 percent rise in operating profit to 149 billion yen, its highest third-quarter result in nine years and its second consecutive third-quarter rise.

While its hybrid home-portable Switch is only approaching year three of its lifecycle, a weak games pipeline last summer and a bullish company sales forecast of 20 million consoles for the current financial year ending March has fed scepticism about the prospects for the device.

However it received a boost with the December release of "Super Smash Bros. Ultimate", which has sold nearly 3 million copies in Japan alone, according to industry magazine Famitsu. Market researcher NPD Group said it was the United States' best-selling game in December, helping the Switch outsell the PS4 to become 2018's biggest-selling console in that country.

"It's not just Smash Bros. but the attractiveness of both the Switch's software and hardware that is driving growth," said Ace Securities analyst Hideki Yasuda.

That momentum in software, supported by incoming titles such as "Pokemon" and "Animal Crossing", has helped lift Nintendo stock 13 percent this year. Shares in Sony are down 0.7 percent.

Investors want Nintendo to do more to cushion itself from the vicissitudes of the console lifecycle, particularly in mobile where it recently scored a modest hit with role-playing game "Dragalia Lost" developed with CyberAgent Inc.

Mobile and online games will form 20 percent of Nintendo's sales by the year ending March 2023, showed estimates from Morningstar researcher Kazunori Ito.

Piers Harding-Rolls, head of games research at IHS Markit, said Nintendo's biggest challenge this year will likely be in bolstering its range of lower-priced devices beyond the current Switch model, which retails in the United States for $299.99.

"There needs to be something in... the $100-200 range" to replace its aging 3DS handheld device, he said.

(Reporting by Sam Nussey; Additional reporting by Makiko Yamazaki; Editing by Christopher Cushing)

By Sam Nussey