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XBox (Games) Games

Microsoft is Bringing Next-Gen Xbox Games To the Xbox One With xCloud (theverge.com) 27

Microsoft will let Xbox One owners play next-gen Xbox games through its xCloud service. The news was buried in a blog post recapping Microsoft's Xbox + Bethesda showcase, with the company confirming plans to leverage Xbox Cloud Gaming (xCloud) for Xbox One consoles. That means the 2013 hardware will be able to play Xbox Series X exclusive games from 2021 -- extending the lifecycle of what would normally soon be obsolete boxes. From a report: "For the millions of people who play on Xbox One consoles today, we are looking forward to sharing more about how we will bring many of these next-gen games, such as Microsoft Flight Simulator, to your console through Xbox Cloud Gaming, just like we do with mobile devices, tablets, and browsers," says Will Tuttle, editor in chief of Microsoft's Xbox Wire. Until now, Microsoft had only described xCloud on consoles as a way for players to "try [games] before you download," but it's clear the company sees the service as offering much more. Microsoft originally announced Microsoft Flight Simulator as an Xbox One title, before quietly removing references to the Xbox One launch in December. Microsoft recently confirmed Flight Simulator will now launch on Xbox Series X / S consoles on July 27th.
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Microsoft is Bringing Next-Gen Xbox Games To the Xbox One With xCloud

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  • Xreally? (Score:5, Funny)

    by LatencyKills ( 1213908 ) on Wednesday June 16, 2021 @06:13AM (#61492460)
    This is the most Xcellent Xnews. I'm so Xcited. Thanks XMicrosoft!
  • Until now, Microsoft had only described xCloud on consoles as a way for players to "try [games] before you download," but it's clear the company sees the service as offering much more.

    Streaming and demoing what a perfect match.

    ... extending the lifecycle of what would normally soon be obsolete boxes.

    A benefit of streaming most wouldn't immediately think of.

  • by indytx ( 825419 ) on Wednesday June 16, 2021 @06:47AM (#61492532)

    This is an interesting money grab. If I had and Xbox One and my friends were moving to the current generation, I might be willing to pay a monthly fee to play the same games they were playing. Of more interest to me would be how the service is priced for Windows. I did not get an invite to the closed beta for Windows 10, but the pricing will be key, especially if it's based on households.

    • I think the beta is open now. I tried it out and played some Halo on my subscription and I'm not on the insider track.

  • by puddingebola ( 2036796 ) on Wednesday June 16, 2021 @06:48AM (#61492536) Journal
    As a value proposition, this really does put the ball in Sony's court. At $70 per game, $120 per year to play anything you like will have real appeal to gamers.
  • These old consoles can't die soon enough. They already fucked up CP2077 trying to make it run on these pieces of shit.

  • Sony is ahead right now, and the PS5 is legitimately a great console. But Microsoft is actively positioning itself to be the Netflix of gaming, and it might actually work. Being told your kinda-obsolete console can now play the latest games, and instead of buying a new console, you just need to pay a subscription fee. That's a pretty good deal. In less than 5 years, I bet we'll see this bundled with TVs the same way Netflix is.

    Funny. Google had the opportunity to do this with Stadia and now it really looks like they're going to get swept out of the way.

    (Stadia is legitimately way better than I expected. I don't have it, but I had access to it for gamedev on the last title I worked on, and I was surprised at how much better it ran over the network than I could get the game to run on my dev machine. It felt like there was less input lag through Stadia than I would get when I was sitting at my desk in the office.)

    • Do you really think Stadia is going to get swept out of the way? I’ve tried PS Now, xCloud, Steam Link and OnLive. Stadia blows them all out of the water. Even Steam Link locally doesn’t perform as well as Stadia which is insane. Stadia is the only service that I would consider as a suitable replacement for local play. All the other services are too laggy or the visual fidelity is not as good. It would be a shame for Stadia (or at least the technology) to not succeed.
      • Like I said, I think Stadia is very good, but as of right now, I don't see a winning marketing strategy. On the technical merits, it's excellent (I can't stress enough how remarkably good it is to people that haven't tried it; it's the most surprised I've been in two decades in this industry), but Microsoft has an established Xbox brand and established hardware partners. Basically, I think it'll be easier for Microsoft to move to a working cloud strategy than I think it will be for Google to establish thems

  • by stikves ( 127823 ) on Wednesday June 16, 2021 @12:48PM (#61493416) Homepage

    This actually makes sense. Microsoft is more in the game software and service business than the hardware (they make a loss on each console), and obviously neither them, nor Sony can build next gen consoles fast enough. Scratch that, even getting a decent gaming PC is difficult nowadays.

    And then "Game Pass" is already here. It was called "The Best Thing That Ever Happened To Gaming" by many gaming outlets, and I can personally confirm this. Yes of course streaming is not as good as playing locally. In the other hand, your Xbox One will crap out in new games. Look at the fiasco with Cyberpunk. I would rather stream it from Microsoft's Xbox Series cloud blades, than play locally on my Xbox One (or PS4 for that matter).

    So good for them, and good for the gamers. Especially when you are already paying for the service.

  • Maybe I missed the thread, but are we really not going to discuss the announced Xbox mini fridge?

    I'm wondering if it's going to be a thermoelectric cooler POS or an actual mini fridge. There are miniature compressors on the market for the camping/12V fridges.

  • If a new console game plays just as well on an old console then what good is a new console ? If the game plays better on a new console then Micro$oft is either ripping off the owners of the old consoles and / or putting them at a competitive dis-advantage when playing against owners of new consoles. If the game doesn't play any better on the new consoles, then they're ripping off the new console owners by selling them something they don't need.

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