supernova8
Banned
Setting the stage
Lots of threads these days talking about how it's "the end for Xbox" etc etc. Getting kinda boring. I thought it might be time for something a tad more constructive.
By most traditional metrics, Xbox Series is/are not doing very well against Playstation 5.
Xbox One didn't do very well against Playstation 4.
Xbox OG didn't do very well against the juggernaut that was the PS2.
But! Xbox 360 did seem to pretty damn well until the latter half of that generation when Sony finally sorted its shit out.
Similarly, Nintendo bombed (in relative terms) with the N64, bombed with the Gamecube (again relatively) against the PS2, but did very well with the Wii, and even managed to stage an amazing comeback with the Switch after the absolute shitshow (commercially) that was the Wii U.
There was some talk by Phil Spencer himself (during that Kinda Funny interview) about how losing the Xbox One generation was the worst thing that could happen since that's when a lot of players were solidifying their online/digital game libraries. However, I proudly present..... Nintendo Switch.
I think the Nintendo Switch debunks Spencer's claim (or implication) that losing last gen was some sort of death knell. Nintendo (until very recently) didn't even have PS3-level barebones online infrastructure (I say that because I always preferred the 360 interface and XBL in general), so I personally see no reason why Xbox couldn't come back from losing the previous generation.
Anyway.... onto the meat of the question
You are in charge of Xbox, you are formulating the overall plan for next-gen (ie this gen) - what is your plan?
I will also outline my own idea of what I'd do (later as a comment) but I'll leave it out for now to keep the post as short as possible. Here are a few guidelines/goalposts to make sure everyone is "playing" by the same rules.
Overarching budget
Assume you have roughly whatever Xbox has/had at the time.
Hardware
SKUs and performance - It's up to you what SKUs you do or do not launch, but let's stipulate that the hardware (performance wise) itself is already pretty much decided (ie there's an Xbox Series X and an Series S, or maybe a digital-only Series X, you can make minor tweaks like that but let's not go crazy with pie-in-the-sky superpowered consoles that realistically wouldn't exist anyway), and you're free to name the console(s) whatever you want.
Pricing - feel free to set whatever price you like (which could even include indirect pricing tactics, such as offering Game Pass for free for a certain period (1, 3, 6, 12 months etc.) or offering a low barrier to entry subscription based model where customers sign up to at least a year of Game Pass and only pay $100 or something) but I'll stipulate that Playstation 5 is going to launch at $499.
Games
Clearly Xbox has opted for a model where all games on Series X (or whatever you choose to call it) have to release on Series S (which, again you can erase from history if you want to). There has been criticism that Xbox has not pushed its hardware enough with first party exclusives (or hasn't had enough heavy-hitter first party exclusives).
Here, we're going to assume that COVID-19 did happen (because it did) and that COVID-19 has affected game development to some degree. However, PS5 managed to release a few heavy hitter titles relatively early on. Here, you can decide what your launch lineup would be, but try to keep it realistic (i.e., nobody expects Xbox to have some amazing launch lineup of 10+ titles). In my mind, I'd like to see maybe 3 or 4 relatively heavy hitters.
Remember, you're Head of Xbox so if you want a series to be rebooted in time for launch, you reboot the damn thing.
Plus, if you decide to go for one (powerful) Xbox SKU then perhaps you will be thinking of really leaning into the power (ie graphics and AI).
EDIT: I'm stipulating that in this alternate reality, Xbox does not even attempt to acquire Activision Blizzard. They have acquired Zenimax though. Feel free, as Xbox Head, to leverage that as you please. Also doesn't mean Xbox cannot strike some sort of exclusivity deal for Call of Duty, assuming regulators will not step in as long as there's no actual acquisition.
Overall messaging
Finally, this is more about setting the overall "tone" for the generation. I think we can all agree that Xbox 360 was very upbeat "games games games, check out these fucking awesome games", while Xbox One just felt like "TV TV TV interactive experrrrrieenzzzz" with somehow less emphasis on actual games despite it being a... games console.
This generation, Phil Spencer has talked a lot about how it's all about making sure everyone gets to play, no matter what device etc etc, but maybe you want to take a more aggressive approach. Maybe you want to say "look we have the most powerful console with the most advanced games, the next-generation begins with Xbox" or something along those lines.
Here, you can also outline how you would reveal the new Xbox console(s), what you would show off at the event, in terms of games coming at launch but also those a bit further out.
TL; DR you're the head of Xbox, what would you have done differently heading into this generation?
Lots of threads these days talking about how it's "the end for Xbox" etc etc. Getting kinda boring. I thought it might be time for something a tad more constructive.
By most traditional metrics, Xbox Series is/are not doing very well against Playstation 5.
Xbox One didn't do very well against Playstation 4.
Xbox OG didn't do very well against the juggernaut that was the PS2.
But! Xbox 360 did seem to pretty damn well until the latter half of that generation when Sony finally sorted its shit out.
Similarly, Nintendo bombed (in relative terms) with the N64, bombed with the Gamecube (again relatively) against the PS2, but did very well with the Wii, and even managed to stage an amazing comeback with the Switch after the absolute shitshow (commercially) that was the Wii U.
There was some talk by Phil Spencer himself (during that Kinda Funny interview) about how losing the Xbox One generation was the worst thing that could happen since that's when a lot of players were solidifying their online/digital game libraries. However, I proudly present..... Nintendo Switch.
I think the Nintendo Switch debunks Spencer's claim (or implication) that losing last gen was some sort of death knell. Nintendo (until very recently) didn't even have PS3-level barebones online infrastructure (I say that because I always preferred the 360 interface and XBL in general), so I personally see no reason why Xbox couldn't come back from losing the previous generation.
Anyway.... onto the meat of the question
You are in charge of Xbox, you are formulating the overall plan for next-gen (ie this gen) - what is your plan?
I will also outline my own idea of what I'd do (later as a comment) but I'll leave it out for now to keep the post as short as possible. Here are a few guidelines/goalposts to make sure everyone is "playing" by the same rules.
Overarching budget
Assume you have roughly whatever Xbox has/had at the time.
Hardware
SKUs and performance - It's up to you what SKUs you do or do not launch, but let's stipulate that the hardware (performance wise) itself is already pretty much decided (ie there's an Xbox Series X and an Series S, or maybe a digital-only Series X, you can make minor tweaks like that but let's not go crazy with pie-in-the-sky superpowered consoles that realistically wouldn't exist anyway), and you're free to name the console(s) whatever you want.
Pricing - feel free to set whatever price you like (which could even include indirect pricing tactics, such as offering Game Pass for free for a certain period (1, 3, 6, 12 months etc.) or offering a low barrier to entry subscription based model where customers sign up to at least a year of Game Pass and only pay $100 or something) but I'll stipulate that Playstation 5 is going to launch at $499.
Games
Clearly Xbox has opted for a model where all games on Series X (or whatever you choose to call it) have to release on Series S (which, again you can erase from history if you want to). There has been criticism that Xbox has not pushed its hardware enough with first party exclusives (or hasn't had enough heavy-hitter first party exclusives).
Here, we're going to assume that COVID-19 did happen (because it did) and that COVID-19 has affected game development to some degree. However, PS5 managed to release a few heavy hitter titles relatively early on. Here, you can decide what your launch lineup would be, but try to keep it realistic (i.e., nobody expects Xbox to have some amazing launch lineup of 10+ titles). In my mind, I'd like to see maybe 3 or 4 relatively heavy hitters.
Remember, you're Head of Xbox so if you want a series to be rebooted in time for launch, you reboot the damn thing.
Plus, if you decide to go for one (powerful) Xbox SKU then perhaps you will be thinking of really leaning into the power (ie graphics and AI).
EDIT: I'm stipulating that in this alternate reality, Xbox does not even attempt to acquire Activision Blizzard. They have acquired Zenimax though. Feel free, as Xbox Head, to leverage that as you please. Also doesn't mean Xbox cannot strike some sort of exclusivity deal for Call of Duty, assuming regulators will not step in as long as there's no actual acquisition.
Overall messaging
Finally, this is more about setting the overall "tone" for the generation. I think we can all agree that Xbox 360 was very upbeat "games games games, check out these fucking awesome games", while Xbox One just felt like "TV TV TV interactive experrrrrieenzzzz" with somehow less emphasis on actual games despite it being a... games console.
This generation, Phil Spencer has talked a lot about how it's all about making sure everyone gets to play, no matter what device etc etc, but maybe you want to take a more aggressive approach. Maybe you want to say "look we have the most powerful console with the most advanced games, the next-generation begins with Xbox" or something along those lines.
Here, you can also outline how you would reveal the new Xbox console(s), what you would show off at the event, in terms of games coming at launch but also those a bit further out.
TL; DR you're the head of Xbox, what would you have done differently heading into this generation?
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