sonycowboy
Member
OK,
They're asking publishers to include the emulation code on the disc itself, right? And to limit using the harddrive, so that the core users can enjoy BC. Seems like a nice enough thing for consumers.
But, I have one question:
Why would publishers want to do this?
Publishers, in general, don't really like BC as it encourages more people to stay with their old games as opposed to buying the new versions. You can say that it could help original Xbox game sales after the 360 is launched, but IMO, it would hinder 360 sales more than help original Xbox sales. Now for the Playstation, which has tens of millions of users, there are definitely some titles that benefited from longer shelf lives, but IMO, most of the sales were to PSOne owners, not PS2.
Plus, it seems to be shifting the BC responsibility (however minor) onto the publishers. I just don't see them caring to do this, but maybe Microsoft is providing some sort of incentives.
They're asking publishers to include the emulation code on the disc itself, right? And to limit using the harddrive, so that the core users can enjoy BC. Seems like a nice enough thing for consumers.
But, I have one question:
Why would publishers want to do this?
Publishers, in general, don't really like BC as it encourages more people to stay with their old games as opposed to buying the new versions. You can say that it could help original Xbox game sales after the 360 is launched, but IMO, it would hinder 360 sales more than help original Xbox sales. Now for the Playstation, which has tens of millions of users, there are definitely some titles that benefited from longer shelf lives, but IMO, most of the sales were to PSOne owners, not PS2.
Plus, it seems to be shifting the BC responsibility (however minor) onto the publishers. I just don't see them caring to do this, but maybe Microsoft is providing some sort of incentives.