HeadClot: It is not just the finding quality games I am concerned about - I am more concerned with a crash similar or worse to the 1983 video game crash.
You know, i've seen people "predict" a crash many times already. It's popular to predict "doom" nowadays. Nintendo is doomed, Valve is doomed, Sony is doomed, Microsoft is doomed, EA is doomed, and the list of companies "doomed" goes on and on. A crash similar to 1983? That's extremely unlikely. Actually, i would say that it's impossible. The gaming industry today is MUCH, MUCH bigger and diverse than it was back in 1983. You can't compare the industry today to how it was 30 years ago.
Back then there was Atari, the king of gaming, and some small competitors that had meaningless a market share. Atari basically dominated the whole gaming market. Whatever happened to it would have taken the whole industry down with it, because, basically, Atari was the gaming industry.
Nowadays it's much different. We have 3 console companies with Sony being the biggest name right now. But even Sony is VERY far from having the majority of the console market share (for the current generation) like Atari did. And then there's the PC and tablets/phones as a viable gaming platforms. Not to mention alternative models like F2P, Early Access, Kickstarter. If one company scews up, it won't bring the entire industry down with it.
Also, let's not forget that gaming never generated as much money as it does today. There's a lot of money coming from the traditional retail market, from mobile gaming and F2P.
The gaming industry in the 80s was still at it's infancy, there were still some doubts about the wole thing. The gaming industry today is much more solid.
HeadClot: Sony is literally bleeding money right now. They have a 78% Chance to go bankrupt in the next two years. Keep in mind if this happens at the same time as valve is having major financial issues then there will be major problems for games. As for Nintendo they have a 75% Chance thanks to the Wii U to go bankrupt in the next 2 years of operation.
I'll quote the article you posted yourself:
"Macroaxis is little more than an algorithm-based prediction tool. They use stock numbers to predict the long term health of companies, something one would need future-telling powers to predict accurately."
Don't take these numbers as FACTS like you're doing there.
Look at this, for example, which isn't an "algorithm-base prediction tool":
http://www.gamesradar.com/nintendo-doomed-not-likely-just-take-look-how-much-money-its-got-bank/
And even if Sony goes bankrupt, someone will certainly pick the PS division up to keep it running. Sony's gaming division has been doing fine for years and the PS4 is already the console with the biggest market share of the current generation. Same goes for Nintendo, since it has the most valuable IPs in the gaming industry.