Microsoft's Tray And Play Unveiled 142
Gamespot has a look at Microsoft's upcoming plans for PC gaming. In addition to a definite gaming perspective for the Longhorn OS and a commitment to the XNA studios package, they have word that someday we may be loading PC games much like console games. From the article: "Tray and Play is exactly what it sounds like - dropping a game disc into an optical drive and loading it up immediately, rather than having to install it to a hard drive. True to form, the game itself cut straight to a start-up screen in less than a minute (including the game's own built-in load time)."
Yes! (Score:3, Insightful)
Microsoft has chosen a feature that not only makes sense, but saves time, hd space, and hopefully hastle.
Re:Yes! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yes! (Score:4, Insightful)
That'd mean I can't pause the game to check my email, talk to people through IM, etc.
As an option that would be cool, but I'd hate to be required to do that.
Re:Yes! (Score:2)
Re:Yes! (Score:2)
Re:Yes! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yes! (Score:3, Insightful)
I switched to Linux years ago (shortly before XP came out), an have struggled with ways to maintain my gaming habit. I end up buying most any big game that comes out for Linux (to support them and because they usually rock), and have been making a lot of use of my PS2, but it would be nice to see publishers and game authors c
Re:Yes! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yes! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Yes! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Yes! (Score:1)
Re:Yes! (Score:1, Interesting)
Can have, perhaps. Do have, certainly not - I've never seen a patch, not even for games that are blatantly as buggy as hell. And I've CERTAINLY never seen a mod.
The patches and mods are stored on the hard drive
s/are/would, if Microsoft permitted them to exist, be/
Re:Yes! (Score:4, Insightful)
And there are certainly patches for Live functionality. Ever see the message "XBox Live must update..." or something like that? (Microsoft does apparently frown on patches that do not relate to Live and for anything that does not add to gameplay)
Of course, if you do not have XBox Live, you will probably not see any of this.
Re:Yes! (Score:1)
Re:Yes! (Score:1)
LiveCD? (Score:4, Funny)
As I understand, Microsoft is going to release games on a Knoppix LiveCD?
Re:LiveCD? (Score:2, Funny)
LiveCD is a extremely crappy distribution mechanism for PC games. "Hay guys! I turned my $1000 PC into a crappy XBox that takes 10x longer to load! But I'm running Gaynix 6-point-0h for FREEDOM!" Please stop bringing it up.
Re:LiveCD? (Score:1)
You obviously did not understand the irony in my comment.
Re:LiveCD? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:LiveCD? (Score:1)
Re:LiveCD? (Score:2)
Allthough you're right for the real big (mostly) FPS-games ; I was surprised to see that Counter-strike : CZ can be played straight from the CD (without installing) ; Allthough it's using a moderately old game/engine ; Still cool to pop-in a CD on a 'puter, and instantly be able to play.
Inevitable (Score:5, Insightful)
Although many people have said, over the last couple of years, that Microsoft intends to kill off the PC as a gaming platform, in the hopes of transporting users over to its own X-Box, I've never believed that this is true. Windows' status as the "gaming OS" is almost certainly a factor in keeping it installed on any number of home PCs. However, there's no denying that PC gaming has had a difficult time of late (although perhaps not so difficult in the second half of 2004, when it finally got some big exclusive releases) and it desperately needs to be more competative with the console market. With keyboard and mouse support in games likely to be more common in the next console generation, this is more urgent than ever.
Now, I used to be a die-hard PC gamer. I've been gaming on the PC since the days when buying a new game meant an hour tweaking config.sys, autoexec.bat and playing with memmaker just to get the right memory configuration for the damned thing to run. When I finally overcame my long-standing aversion to consoles a couple of years ago and bought a PS2, I was amazed by how much simpler and lower-hassle the whole process is on a console. Even today, playing a PC game involves checking that your system meets the specification, sitting through an install process which could take anywhere from a couple of minutes through to half an hour, depending on the game and your system, determining the settings which will give you the best balance between appearance and performance and then quite often searching for patches to fix the bug that makes the game crash every 5 minutes on your hardware configuration. That this puts people off is hardly a surprise.
Microsoft's move here is, at least, a first step towards remedying this situation.
Re:Inevitable (Score:2)
What's the point? (Score:3, Insightful)
Lame (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Lame (Score:2)
Obvious why is it not , CDs are highly perishable and fliping them in and out and all about is suicide(from a disk perspective) in a pc enviroment (the same cannot be said for consoles where cds are ussualy in the box or the machine plus the swapping is far less frequent , although i do prefer carts)
If i couldnt get a no-cd then i would make an image or copy the cd using clone cd
Re:Lame (Score:3, Interesting)
A CD will not decay if it is handled properly, dont stack your CDs, dont leave them outside the case. if they dont have a case, get one, even just those paper sleeves.
Re:Lame (Score:2)
What's this about ? So they don't bend ? or ?
Re:Lame (Score:2)
Re:Lame (Score:1)
Re:Lame (Score:3, Insightful)
what a goddamn bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
So why exactly is it such a bad idea? First off most PC games still come on CD because more people have a CD player then a DVD player. Going to DVD only games would be easier but so far no game company wants to take the risk of upsetting the non-dvd owners.
Second is do you really trust microsoft to choose the most optimal installation place for your games? Not everyone of us have just one partition.
Third you can say goodbay to editing your game files if they are on a read only media. Many PC games have a happy modding community that is unique to PC gaming. But this works only if you can modify the game files.
Fourth many people who buy their games in the shop still use no-cd fixes because it allows them to play the game they want without first searching for the CD. I am even worse as my gaming PC is a monster wich makes a lot of noise so I put it in another room two doors away. Going back to the days of searching through a stack of CD's before I can play is not a step forward.
Fifth is that no matter how much more advanced DVD players become they will always be lagging behind the speed of a HD.
Sixth wich problem does it really solve? People who think installing a game is to nerdie won't be using a PC for gaming in the first place.
But most important this is microsoft trying to be smart. I love the "Close Combat" series of games but it was a microsoft game and so unlike every other game of that era it required me to manaually set the color depth from 32 to 16 to play the game. Yes a microsoft game was not able to use directx to simply do that for me. If MS wants to make games easier then they should start with their own games. MS flight simulator playing from a readonly media? It would ruin the game.
Perhaps MS should do a test to see how many windows users have got the autoplay feature they added turned off.
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:4, Insightful)
First, I don't buy for a minute that more people have CD drives than DVD drives. It's been pretty much impossible to buy a new PC for the last couple of years from any of the off-the-rack vendors without it coming with a DVD drive. The transition from CD to DVD for PC games has taken far too long already and I wish the publishers who haven't already would just hurry up and make the link. If you haven't got a DVD drive, chances are you've custom built your system. In which case, you're perfectly capable of putting in a sub-$50 DVD drive yourself.
Second, If the installations are only going to be a couple of megs at most for save-games, I don't honestly see that it matters where the install goes.
Third, nobody's stopping other publishers from releasing their games under the old system if they want to. If id decide they want to make Doom 4 moddable, they can do so.
Fourth, there's some slight validity to the point about having to look for the disk to play the game. However, with the latest forms of copy-protection, it seems as though the days of CD emulation for playing games may be running out anyway (yes, I know there are work-arounds for all the current systems, but I don't see this lasting). Besides, I somehow manage to get by with my stacks of console games, all of which need the disk in the drive.
Fifth, whether the DVD drive is slower than the HDD isn't necessarily relevant. If it can run the game with "acceptable" loading times and no stuttering in-game, nobody with any sense of perspective is actually going to care.
Sixth, I suspect it's intended to make PC gaming more attractive to people who don't necessarily go in for the whole "l33ter than thou - my system is the one-true-way to play games" mentality, but who have expectations regarding ease of use and lack of hassle.
Finally, I don't think that condemning every move Microsoft makes on the basis of a problem you had with one of their own (now obsolete) games is really a particularly strong basis on which to argue. Just to reinforce a point I made above, this is not going to do ANYTHING to stop you playing "different types of games you enjoy more" on the PC.
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:3, Insightful)
It IS rellevant. Have you ever had to sit through "loading" screens just to get from one menu to the other on a PC recently (baring console ports)? I cant remember the last time that that has happened. I watch my brother playing NHL Hockey 200X all the time, and to go from the "caland
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
The numbers you are citing are in MB/s, and are the theoretical bus speed of SATA and various PATA UDMA modes. There is currently no single consumer hard drive able to sustain even the slowest mode you refer to (UDMA4), although modern HDs are pretty close. SATA was introduced because it's conceivable that UDMA6 won't be fast enough in the not-too-distant future, b
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
It IS rellevant. Have you ever had to sit through "loading" screens just to get from one menu to the other on a PC recently (baring console ports)?
Agreed. PC gaming is moving towards zero-load gameplay. Look at the Unreal 3 Engine, one of the features they're hyping is it's predictive loading, so you NEVER see a loading screen.
Unreal 3, and games using the engine, will allow you to play the entire game, from beginning to end, without ever having to wait for anything to load for even a second (no matter
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:1)
Zero loading gameplay is the next step to making games more immersive and having that "movie like" feel to it. GTA:Vice City had loading times for me going between the islands measured (through completely unscientific means) of less then a second. How did they manage this? (bear in
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
Eh, it works on certain Xbox games. Ninja Gaiden in particular just has a brief load at the start of the game (especially if it isn't in the cache), and then you get a very occasional loading time of a second or two (basically only when you start a ne
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:1)
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:1)
As soon as you get save slots you might as well buy PS2s and X-Boxes. There is suddenly no difference between PCs and X-Boxes then aside from that you can upgrade them and the hardware compatibility is not to be depended on.
That and save files will only get bigger too, its a fact of life.
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
Yeah, my keyboard/mouse plays EXACTLY like a dual shock. And I play all my games at 640x480 on a blurry screen, too.
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:1)
No, it hasn't been nearly impossible t
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
The point the original poster made still stands, if you buy a machine capable of gaming then a combo drive is the very least you are going to expect it to be bundled with these days.
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:1)
So people will splurge $300 on the latest-and-greatest video card but can't be bothered to drop the $60 on a DVD-ROM drive? Are you sure we're not talking about penis extension here?
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
Look, it's just simple (as with about 80% of Slashdot's stories): If you don't like it, don't buy it
If you don't want to play a game that uses Tray&Play, don't buy any. It's not like game installers and downloadable games will suddenly cease to exist the instant this technology becomes available.
Criminy, get a grip. Close Combat? Those games were, what, 1998?
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
Re:what a goddamn bad idea (Score:2)
Just a minor point. Myst 4 is actually DVD only (Which is a good thing, because it takes up 2 DVDs, with a third for Myth 3 thrown in.).
Coincidence? (Score:2)
Redmond, we have a problem... (Score:3, Insightful)
What kind of copy protection will be used? Is this really just a scheme to prevent people from playing with duped cds, or installing a game and passing the cd on to a friend?
What about patches? Do they really expect every game to be perfect when it goes gold? I think that'd be a pretty tough sell for most publishers and developers right now...
Finally, this *is* 2005, not 1995. Hard disks are big. There's no reason not to install to the hard disk. The only thing that I can see frustrating consumers right now is multiple-disc installs. (Publishers, please use a frickin' dvd instead of two, three, or more cds.)
Installing an average game does take a few minutes, but the payoff is much, much shorter load times. Given the choice of spending five or ten minutes installing a game or having load times "under a minute" (read: up to 59 seconds) every time its played, I think consumers would choose to install it.
Re:Redmond, we have a problem... (Score:3, Funny)
No! Hahahah, we'd never do anything like that. [playsforsure.com]
Re:Redmond, we have a problem... (Score:2)
Re:Redmond, we have a problem... (Score:2)
Makes sense (Score:2)
And yes, the first thing I'll do is create a library of virtual DVD's so that I don't have to keep looking for wherever it is that I'm keeping my games these days. But for those pe
Just a few points (Score:2)
Re:Just a few points (Score:1)
Re:Just a few points (Score:2)
Sorry for disagreeing with you twice in one thread, but Steam didn't exactly prevent piracy. It was cracked, and as far as I am aware, cracked versions that actually enable you to play online are maintained as Steam or HL2 is updated. If that's true (I never tried, I bought the game), HL1 had a better copy-protection. You might be right about it being one of the few games that was available in retail first, though.
As far as patches in this system ar
Re:Just a few points (Score:2)
Re:Just a few points (Score:2)
Valve shut down the
Re:Just a few points (Score:2)
Re:Just a few points (Score:1)
PC games aren't signed. If ${foo} developer wants to make a patchable/mod-able PC game, MS won't be able to stop him(without buying the company).
Re:Just a few points (Score:2)
And in response to mods - the Xbox is hardly the tool of c
Patches? (Score:2)
Re:Patches? (Score:3, Insightful)
For instance: the game loader could check the computer for "override" directories and use binaries/data from there before using the ones on the DVD.
See? Trivial. Some games already do this.
Re:Patches? (Score:3, Interesting)
What about expansion packs that PCs are notorious for? Diablo, WC, Starcraft, all of the C&C and RA games.. Consoles don't even bother with these things, but PC games do them quite a bit, how are they going to handle those?
Step backwards? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't want to attempt counting how many games I have. They're all installed on my hard drive, and I can access each one with 3 keypresses (thanks to a nifty app called iKey); I don't want to rootle around in the geeky mess that is my room trying to find the single disc I need to be able to play a game. That's what hard drives are *for* - to fill up with Stuff.
Also, having playable discs means there isn't the available space for larger or more files (graphics, sounds - all the small things that help make up a game) - installers and compression mean you can get lots of data on your HD from less data on the disc. More files means more beautiful.
Combination approach? (Score:1, Funny)
Tray and Play is exactly what it sounds like
Sliding down stairs at high speeds?
This doesn't have to be an either/or proposition. What's wrong with installing the files on the fly when you put the disc in?
In any case, I don't see what's necessary from the OS side of things - this sort of thing has been possible since Autorun in Windows 95 - it's game developers that need to implement this, not Microsoft.
Re:Combination approach? (Score:1)
Re:Combination approach? (Score:1)
It should be possible for most games to load segments on demand. Then speed doesn't matter too much as long as it's fast enough.
They Don't Care (Score:1)
After all the above debate, Microsoft still doesn't care one way or the other what we think. :-)
Load times (Score:1)
Don't see the problem (Score:2)
I remember when the first CD-ROM games came out. The total installation size was about 1 mb because it read everything from the CD. And I had a speedy Quad-speed CD-ROM drive so I had no problem.
Now they have 52+x CD-ROM drives, yet the only time it reads from the CD is to grab a 1 gb chunk off of it to throw it on your poor hard drive. I'd like to at least have a CHOICE to play it from the CD-ROM drive because otherwise why
Re:Don't see the problem (Score:2)
Re:Don't see the problem (Score:2)
And if the modder can't figure out how to do that, then how the hell is he/she modding the game?
Re:Don't see the problem (Score:2)
Re:Don't see the problem (Score:2)
The first CD games, as
Re:Don't see the problem (Score:2)
Re:Don't see the problem (Score:2)
Think people! (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course you can patch and mod the game, just look at the Xbox. For Games like Ninja Gaiden you can add new content and change/improve other things like the camera.
The patch/mod whatever is stored on the HD and the game knows to check the HD for this, this also handles the whole save game file issue. So technically it most likely installs a game folder on your HD where your save game files and modifications can be placed and then is referenced by the game when it's loaded.
I mean seriously, for such an
Re:Think people! (Score:2)
It's a combination of clueless people and the standard reaction to change that most slashdotters have.
"Oh my god, they're going to change the way things work! I hate it!"
Slashdotters are the most unadaptable group of people outside of an old folks home.
the point of HD is the access time (Score:2, Insightful)
The point of putting stuff on the hard drive is the access time. An open xbox is a great example: play Halo from the CD. Observe the loading times. Now copy it to the hard drive. Observe the new loading times.
It's TEN TIMES faster to load from the hard drive. (heh, remember loading times on the PS1?)
Also, observe the sound difference...
Of course, the difference is subject to the speed of the cd drive, but the CD (DVD) will
CD serial numbers? (Score:2)
I don't want to have to deal with the disk (Score:3, Interesting)
I thought we were moving towards a "just purchase the license, now download the game" model. This seems like a small step backwards, or sideways from the inevitable elimination of physical media as a distribution model. One of my favourite gaming experiences recently was playing the Open Beta of WoW, and going to the store to buy my reserved copy, entering in the serial number, not even removing the discs from their case (thanks for the backups, Blizzard) and playing the game. I see the evolution of that model as being a lot more productive in the long run.
Re:I don't want to have to deal with the disk (Score:2)
So I take it you don't watch DVDs, huh?
Re:I don't want to have to deal with the disk (Score:2)
I'd rather have digital distribution of films as well.
But the name ... (Score:2)
But the name must change. It's just seems like a big type - tray and pay. It sounds like a bad anti-piracy slogan. Please try and pay for your games. ;D
Not REQUIRED (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure that there are a lot of games that will bene
About time (Score:2)
Mod me down, -1 pro microsoft statement.
Re:About time (Score:3, Insightful)
The problems as I See them (Score:3, Interesting)
2. What do we do for Multi CD games? I'd love it if everything were on DVD, but the fact is, publishers have been saying they'[d do this for literally years, and yet they still have the audacity to ship 5-6 cd games without even the OPTION to get them on DVD. Oh, yeah - I want load times like FFIX on the PS again - Please!?!?!?!
3. I don't care how you optimize the system - my CD drive reads data slower than my HDD, and cant store temp files and config settings. Im guessing that this miracle will use some sort of configured software on the PC - and it will still be slower. Come on, with SATA HDD's getting cheaper, while M$'s solution will clearly take rediculous system resources - whats it going to do, cache it to RAM? - this is for console players who want to use a mouse. Great marketing, poor technology - please remember the Disable button.
Finally! We catch up to 20 year old technology! (Score:1, Troll)
Uh huh (Score:2, Interesting)
You're forgetting something (Score:4, Interesting)
It looks like they forgot to include the OS boot time in their calculations. Throw that in and I'm sure it's still up around 3 minutes at least. Real consoles can go from power-on to title screen in less time than it took this tray-and-play to finish throwing up splash screens.
Of course, more interestingly, considering all the DRM crap we've had snuck on us thanks to AutoRun, why do I forsee myself turning this "feature" off for security reasons?
Saving PC Gaming? (Score:3, Insightful)
Os Partition? (Score:2)
It would be awesome if this happens because it would make PC games much more Operating System agnostic. I dont run any windows boxes/ partitions at all - but id sure like to have a bit more of the Gaming pie!
Re:A truely sad day. (Score:1)
Re:A truely sad day. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:A truely sad day. (Score:1)
If I rememeber correctly, after all, its been like 7+ years.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)