Comments on: Xbox 360 preview gets jump on rivals
As it looks to build on gains and steal customers from Sony, Microsoft beats out rivals in unveiling new generation of console.![]()
Photos: Xbox's coming-out party
As it looks to build on gains and steal customers from Sony, Microsoft beats out rivals in unveiling new generation of console.![]()
Photos: Xbox's coming-out party
December 5, 2009 4:54 PM PST
December 5, 2009 2:35 PM PST
December 5, 2009 1:11 PM PST
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Xbox 720 comes out. But that's just 'maybe'. Right now, I just don't
have any reason to think about game machines. My real life is far
too interesting to waste time on games.
People say MS is smart, but every forum I have read so far all say the same thing - XBox infomercial sucked, the games look horrible and there was no content at all from the unveiling, which of course, was already beaten to the punch thanks to the internet.
lol
I will still buy it but what a brilliant way to get millions of people to watch commercials. God MS is smart.
I apologize in advance for the length of this essay, but I just thought I would share my thoughts about the next Xbox, as someone who's been playing games for more than 20 years. Without further ado...
Aesthetically, the Xbox 360 is pleasing to my eye. It has broad, sweeping curves and the white casing is very nice. What looks to be stainless steel serves as the drive plate, which also looks good. The ability to remove the front plate and customize it with a replaceable "skin" is a degree of customization that I feel Microsoft is wise to support. Gamers, for the most part, are unique individuals. Catering to customization will instill an enhanced feeling of ownership.
Initially, I was extremely turned off by the vertical orientation of the console, which was highlighted in every picture. My experience with seating PS2s vertically is that it's a quick ticket to disc read errors, which renders your console inoperable. Positioning a console vertically also reduces the footprint and gives it a higher center of gravity, increasing the likelihood of damage should it ever fall over. I was very relieved to see the Xbox 360 laying down last night.
The addition of wireless controllers, in my opinion, is a major selling point of the Xbox 360. Until Nintendo?s WaveBird, wireless controllers were only really useful in practice as paperweights or doorstops. While I have yet to hear what technology the Xbox 360?s controllers will use to communicate with the console, I would not be surprised if they chose to go with Bluetooth or a similar high frequency, high speed communicator. However, exactly how much of a selling point the controllers will be remains to be seen, pending whether the controller has built-in rechargeable batteries or not.
The controller is nice, in and of itself, but I won?t know for sure until I wrap my hands around it. I liked the bigger Xbox controllers, so I?m slightly put off by their decision to pursue the smaller designs. I would wish for a larger controller option, but I doubt I would get it.
Technically, I was blown away by what the Xbox 360 is capable of. Three dual-core 3.2 GHz processors power this thing, packing in roughly a teraflop of processing power. It has a proprietary ATi 3D card in it, which clocks at 500 MHz and has 10 MB of dedicated memory. That seems very low to me, but it has 48 pipelines in it, which is something I?m still trying to wrap my brain around. When it all came down, I could not deny the high quality pictures my eyes were seeing (the only exception being Perfect Dark, more on that in a bit). There is an option to include a removable 20 GB hard drive, which mounts to the side or the top, depending on how you orient your console. This will keep costs down and allow users the option to just use a 64 MB memory card, for which the console has two slots on the front.
Game-wise, I was not impressed much at all. The next ?Need For Speed? and ?Project Gotham Racing? games look to be the absolute benchmark by which the next generation will be judged. ?Quake 4? also looked very impressive, as did ?Madden 2006.? I can?t wait to see information on ?The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion.? Unfortunately, we didn?t get to see much of those games; they chose instead to highlight Perfect Dark 0, which looked disappointingly horrible. Inconsistent frame rates, low poly-count models, and design changes to the lead character, Joanna Dark, have killed this game for me at this point in time. I realize that it?s still in development, though, so I hope they turn it around. In all honesty, the game looked like it belonged on the PS2, not the next Xbox.
Another thing I?m reserving judgment on is the issue of backwards compatibility. Personally, I feel it would be a terrible mistake for Microsoft to not include this feature in Xbox 360. Sony is on record for strongly considering putting it into their PS3 and Nintendo has announced that it?s considering building in Revolution with GameCube play capability. The system is pretty much being developed around Xbox Live, which many Xbox games support. To allow people to continue to play their old Xbox games on Live on the Xbox 360 would mean that your existing user base has an automatic reason to upgrade. As a friend of mine put it, ?I?m not ready to get rid of my Xbox, yet.? I was more upset than surprised when the rumors the Xbox would play Dreamcast games was debunked, but I would be very surprised if Xbox 360 didn?t play Xbox games.
If they were taking pre-orders, I?d plop down money today. Overall, I?m very impressed with the Xbox 360 package and I look forward to getting one later this year. I?m a serious collector, so price isn?t much an issue with me, but the way it sounds, the system may introduce at a reasonable price point without the hard drive.
I can?t wait to learn more at E3.
Dual Core - I don't think the PowerPC chip used is dual core. It is described as "two hardware threads" and that sounds more like hyperthreading to me.
Even so, thanks for the write-up.
Most importantly, I didn't really hear any killer features or see any killer games. They were trying to make HD their killer feature, but it seems a little high end(of course, broadband was pretty high end a few years ago). Customization via micropayments? If it costs money, I don't think gamers will do it.
What I really wanted to know was:
- is it backward compatible? My guess is it isn't considering they never mentioned it during the broadcast
- how much is it going to cost?
I own an Xbox and a PS2 right now, and I didn't see anything I'd want to give up those systems for. My gut says Microsoft might have a real problem on its hands if people decide the current generation is "good enough" and/or want to wait for Sony to respond with their feature set.
The only problem right now is that only a few games support the feature of the Xbox. We will see what happens with Xbox 360.
Turismo 4, both of which I can play in high definition. Add the fact
that the PS3 is going to have BluRay DVD and the XBox 360 won't,
doesn't make me want to put a deposit down on the new XBox.
Nothing new here... waiting to hear what Sony is going to come up
with!
- Ugly...
- by hatandglasses13 May 15, 2005 9:29 AM PDT
- This thing is ugly. Looks like my old Dell Dimension case, just in
- Like this Reply to this comment
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- pc with windows
- by Scott W June 2, 2005 9:29 AM PDT
- hehe, it's probably a PC running on windows
- Like this
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(25 Comments)silver instead of the black/dark gray. Is it a PC? Or is it a gaming
console? The world will never know.
architechture. can't wait to play Halo 3 and see
a blue screen.
blue screen vs blu-ray. which is best?