Changing the rendering spec of a console is totally the same as making WiFi and HDMI standard.
Of course it is, but revision on consoles happen every gen. This is just a revision on specs and that's not unheard of either.
Changing the rendering spec of a console is totally the same as making WiFi and HDMI standard.
I'm talking about specs There's a crowd who cares about upgradable hardware, they're called PC gamers. Console gamers always say they like not worrying about Upgrading Hardware. Are we gonna pretend That hasn't been a Narrative For years?
I'm talking about specs There's a crowd who cares about upgradable hardware, they're called PC gamers. Console gamers always say they like not worrying about Upgrading Hardware. Are we gonna pretend That hasn't been a Narrative For years?
Didn't the 3DS have a upgrade in hardware?
While I do -- personally -- believe this is a graceful way to exit the console market, I fully admit it's just speculation. But all we have right now is speculation and PR statements. Surely GAF is more intelligent than just leaning on PR and leaving it at that, right?
If there is a revision that is more powerful, why not? You didn't have to buy the elite controller, but it sold like crazy. Didn't the 3DS have a upgrade in hardware?
I said it puts them in an excellent position to exit the console market. Let's use our brains instead of simply swallowing the PR. Microsoft has been criminally poor at messaging and PR this generation, so I'm puzzled why a stance of caution is being viewed as crazy on this board. "Wishful thinking" would be the people who believe this will work without a hitch and will be in the consumers' best interests, something that Microsoft hasn't been very consistent on these past few years.
Some people are taking the pieces and putting them together. This paints a possible picture of Microsoft exiting the console market for some very understandable reasons:
1) Splitting games between platforms (a.k.a "going multiplatform") has never, ever, ever been a good thing for first party platforms in the history of videogames. Ever. Microsoft is trying something new, but you're ignorant or a fanboy if you don't at least acknowledge that fact. So, there's a very good reason to be cautious.
2) Microsoft is making these moves at the same time that their console is getting trounced by PS4. "Trouced" by Microsoft's own definition, since their plans for X1 were incredibly lofty and I doubt they've achieved their plans.
See the answer to #23) It's one of Microsoft's least-profitable segments of the company. Plenty of threads have been made on this topic.
4) Being a "platform" instead of a "console" naturally puts you in a position where you can divorce yourself from the console hardware. Not saying their recent actions guarantee they will leave consoles, but if Microsoft is trying to double-down on consoles, they're sure going about it in a weird way.
5) We heard all of these same exact arguments that "Microsoft has a glorious plan for the future. They're just innnovating! Stop hating on their ideas" a few years ago when Microsoft announced always-on and TV TV TV SPORTS and less powerful hardware and $499 and all that. So, you'll forgive us some scepticism.
By thinking critically.
While I do -- personally -- believe this is a graceful way to exit the console market, I fully admit it's just speculation. But all we have right now is speculation and PR statements. Surely GAF is more intelligent than just leaning on PR and leaving it at that, right?
Imo exiting the purely dedicated console market =/= putting the brand to pasture.To all those saying Microsoft wants to exit the console market quietly, why on earth wouldn't they just sell the Xbox business for $5-$10bn instead of putting it out to pasture? Or do what they did with Nokia and say "We're writing off $5bn"?
If they were dropping gaming (which is, until these announcements, basically the same as their console business) then they'd have to make a shareholder announcement.
Some of the hardcore Xbox fans will buy it I didn't say none wouldn't. I'm talking about the console market in general. I don't see buying a console and having to buy parts to keep up with games working.
OK, some people have made some plausible arguments pro MS' new strategy.
For me, this would mean the end of the Xbox vs. Playstation console war. It just wouldn't make sense anymore.
I just can't see how PC focus and hardware updates will ever give MS the edge over Sony in the console race.
It's more like this: 'OK. we will never win world-wide, let's focus on PC, offer a cheap alternative to PC and work with what we have'.
Why should I upgrade my console every 2 years when major exclusive titles take longer to develop? No, this discussion is going nowhere. If this is going to happen, for me personally, Xbox is indeed dad.
And here's why I think, this won't be a 100% success: Take DLC/pre-order bonuses as an example how the gamer psyche works:
No one forces you to pre-order games for bonusses or to buy DLC either - they are optional. The base game still works. Still, this leaves a sour taste in my (and going by GAF threads also for many others) mouth and I tend to not buy games with 100 DLCs, because I'm feeling that I'm missing out on something and on the other hand I don't want to spend much more than the base price.
Same situation with 'Xbox2.x'. Let's say Xbox2 is released in fall 2018. Knowing that this hardware will be upgraded along the road, I will be even more critical in evaluating the value of Xbox2 at release, meaning 'are the scheduled games worth it" to buy the console at launch/ in it's first year or should I wait, because this will feel like the inferior experience in 1 or 2 years.
Yes, upgrades may be a nice thing to have, but I don't think they will become a winning factor in the console space. Upgrading PCs is different, because the enthusiast PC-gamer is a totally different breed than the COD, GTA, FIFA console gamer. Apples and oranges. Master and peasant ;P
And to close this of, I'm 100% sure that however those upgrades may look like, we will have even smaller leaps in terms of graphics, KI, physics in 5-year cycles. Yes exchanging the GFX might be a easy thing to do, but what about the other components? What if they are doing a XboxOne.5 in 2017? The processor in XboxOne will still be shit and can't be easily exchanged like a module. Devs will have lots of fun optimizing games that are CPU-hungry for two platforms(remember AC Syndicate). So we will be stuck with fidelity and fps improvements only for a very long time.
They tried this already iirc.Just wait for Xbox live as a monthly service tied to your hardware on a 24month renewal cycle where you pay per month and then get upgrades at the end of your contract. Sounds like another device that people upgrade regurlarly
Some of the hardcore Xbox fans will buy it I didn't say none wouldn't. I'm talking about the console market in general. I don't see buying a console and having to buy parts to keep up with games working.
I don't think they're looking at upgraded parts. Just new console iterations.
That's because they are used to waiting for mama to drop a chewed up nightcrawler in their mouths.
Yeah, they added a nub. Can you imagine the e3 megatons if they add a nub to the Xbox One?
Well that's even worse imo, I definitely don't think console gamers are gonna buy a new console every couple of years.
Well that's even worse imo, I definitely don't think console gamers are gonna buy a new console every couple of years.
MS firing shots everywhere that will end shooting their own foot.
Xbox-ready PCs then. ;D
Are there people in the thread defending this????
When people buy a console they expect it to last a generation. .....
It's more like this: 'OK. we will never win world-wide, let's focus on PC, offer a cheap alternative to PC and work with what we have'.
They did in the past. It isn't like console buyers bought one console and only one console during the life of a generation.
I would
Yes people buy different consoles not iterations of the same console. I just don't think it's gonna work, but hey that's just my opinion.
To all those saying Microsoft wants to exit the console market quietly, why on earth wouldn't they just sell the Xbox business for $5-$10bn instead of putting it out to pasture? Or do what they did with Nokia and say "We're writing off $5bn"?
If they were dropping gaming (which is, until these announcements, basically the same as their console business) then they'd have to make a shareholder announcement.
As everyone has said Microsoft wants to be a services company so it's obvious why this is happening.
I could see this working in one way - if they released a new Xbox every 2 years (lets say) but the games would, like on a PC, work regardless. The newer xbox gets better features, maybe higher res textures, runs better. Maybe a guarantee each game will run on the the most recent 3 - giving a 6 years lifespan to an xbox purchase
As everyone has said Microsoft wants to be a services company so it's obvious why this is happening.
I could see this working in one way - if they released a new Xbox every 2 years (lets say) but the games would, like on a PC, work regardless. The newer xbox gets better features, maybe higher res textures, runs better. Maybe a guarantee each game will run on the the most recent 3 - giving a 6 years lifespan to an xbox purchase
Thing is, I've seen this much longer ago. It was really with Ray Ozzie (former MS CTO) talked about this very "future" with the Microsoft platform (3 screens and a cloud...you should read up on it...I believe this was Vista planning days or something, so forward thinking). it's only truly coming to fruition now. Microsoft has had these pieces in place for a long time (GFWL was an attempt but they just royally screwed that up) and I have been waiting for them to freaking hook everything up together in one cohesive juncture. They really couldn't do it because of the DOJ stuff that basically had them in lockdown till like 2010 or something, I forget. So now seeing that that vision is coming true, gaming is just another cog in the machine (and that's why some people have been saying in other thread that people don't see the bigger picture). I just love gaming and seeing gaming take a new form is exciting to me (especially for the game I'm developing). I don't like doing the same thing over and over again, I like new experiences.
But they have a lot of work to do in order to make this actually work. I will say that I don't know how much more I will be involved in these discussions as it gets tiring repeating myself (as i said before i don't like doing that). I'm glad some people see it though.
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corporate cheerleading grates on some, you kinda need to know that if you are going to participate in social media.
I sure as fuck don't want a single company controlling every device and having every bit of information in my life run through their algorithms, hence my hope they fail with their "One Microsoft" strategy of domination.
In an ideal world, these companies would be broken up once they reach a certain size. There should also be a maximum wage and punitive inheritance taxes to get rid of the controlling oligarchies that have captured 'democratic' governments. Power to the people!
Sales of the Xbox One is going to nosedive from this point.
Surface line?
They want to be both of course.
Why would they? Have iPhone sales nose dived after having a new one every year that essentially does the same thing, only with more power?
People rebuy consoles all the time when re-designs come out, but you're telling me they wouldn't dish out for one but with more power?
Youre kidding right?
Sure they do. People didn't buy the PS3 slim? Didn't buy the 360 with the built in wifi and hdmi? Of course they did. Those had hardware changes and made the system better, smaller or whatever. If you better a system people will buy it.
The more I think about it, the more I'm realizing this is the easiest way to discontinue the Xbox brand of consoles altogether and merge it into their Windows platforms.
Had MS released Xbox Two or whatever, and it sold less than estimated, then that damages the brand even more. Hardware refreshes like this will allow MS to refer to the "Xbox Family" and MAUs much easier. There won't need to be major R&D costs for a new piece of hardware because they just have to keep updating components incrementally. It'll allow the Xbox to suffer whatever fate it has infront of it in a way that will be somewhat invisible to the general public, keep hardcore Xbox fans interested (or have them bail out onto the Windows 10 platform where they can play all their XB exclusive games), and so on.
This is a terrible idea from a mass market perspective but that's not what they're aiming for. They're folding Xbox into Windows, and this is kind of a brilliant move in doing it slowly but steady without causing a large amount of waves. It won't sell anything what a Playstation 5 might sell, but that's the point, because by then MS would want to be out of the console game and selling PC boxes at that point, some with the Xbox branding on it.
I always knew XB1 would be Microsoft's last console but the way they're transitioning is kind of brilliant. Well, maybe not from a sales point of view, but in keeping their Xbox brand healthy while trying to attract a new gaming audience for Windows 10? Absolutely.
Moving to a unified platform doesn't mean upgrades every year like smartphones/tablets. Every 4 years is fine with me.
True, the second part of that equation is to get people to buy it in large numbers though. This kind of model sounds so much worse than how it is now in regards to marketing and selling units, I just don't envision a shift like this bringing in more hardware sales or users from a console/living room perspective. They'll get more Windows 10 Store users though, with PC/Phone/Surface integration, which is ultimately what they're after I guess.
It just sounds so much more convoluted I guess is what I'm saying. And if Microsoft isn't happy with their living room business now I don't see how this is going to give it a boost.
3DO, but that was back in the 90s.
HOLY CRAP!!! This is a really nice set of thoughts. I did notice Phil said Windows more than Xbox also.
They wanted to, but their failure to do so is basically what defines this era of the company, and the corporate restructuring basically rearranged their priorities almost entirely back around productivity, services and the OS. Surface lingers on because the enterprise market has not yet decided entirely which let platform to back, although it's still losing to iOS and Android it's not quite sewn up, but their interests in that market are purely to prevent enterprise from moving away from Office and Windows as they move from desktop to mobile computing.
You need to prepare yourself for a big change in the amount of money and emphasis MS place on the Xbox One. This is it for exclusive AAA development now, that content will be created primarily for the PC and may/may not run on the Xbox One, and there will probably be few to zero major third party deals from here on out. E3 will mention the Xbox One a lot, but probably entirely under the "Windows 10 umbrella". They are winding the console down bro.
You're comparing Different things Consoles have Had slim versions for a long time. There's never been a console released that was Obsolete 2 years later. That model works with Smart phones, I don't think it will with consoles.
They wanted to, but their failure to do so is basically what defines this era of the company, and the corporate restructuring basically rearranged their priorities almost entirely back around productivity, services and the OS. Surface lingers on because the enterprise market has not yet decided entirely which let platform to back, although it's still losing to iOS and Android it's not quite sewn up, but their interests in that market are purely to prevent enterprise from moving away from Office and Windows as they move from desktop to mobile computing.
You need to prepare yourself for a big change in the amount of money and emphasis MS place on the Xbox One. This is it for exclusive AAA development now, that content will be created primarily for the PC and may/may not run on the Xbox One, and there will probably be few to zero major third party deals from here on out. E3 will mention the Xbox One a lot, but probably entirely under the "Windows 10 umbrella". They are winding the console down bro.
You feel the same about Apple, Samsung, Amazon, and Google? They each spend every day dreaming up ways to get more of their devices and services into your life.
You're comparing Different things Consoles have Had slim versions for a long time. There's never been a console released that was Obsolete 2 years later. That model works with Smart phones, I don't think it will with consoles.
Right? What's your point? You think your current Xbox is two years old so it's obsolete?
I reckon a future console with specific upgradeable plug n play parts could work. So the device is more than a console, not quite a PC, but gives a more PC like experience.
Launch day Xbox plays games in 900/30
Xbox with GPU replaced plays games in 1080/60
Xbox with SSD upgrade loads quicker
Xbox with ram and GPU upgrades can go 4K or whatever
Just like a PC now, but without requiring knowledge on how to upgrade. It's all plug and play.