- Joined
- Dec 12, 2022
tell that retard to buy a fucking monitor?
What if I want to see myself genociding the French in EU4 on my 65 inch screen?
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tell that retard to buy a fucking monitor?
Don't you remember? People that didn't get the Xbox One stuck with 360 like Donnie boy told them back in 2013.I figured they would have done that to the Xbox One.
I remember ads for the One on my 360 back then too. They told me to stick to the 360 but want me to buy a One? Make up your mind.Don't you remember? People that didn't get the Xbox One stuck with 360 like Donnie boy told them back in 2013.
The OG xbox was legitimately a great console and had the best versions of every third party title( and the xbox s controller didn't suck dick to use unlike the dualshock 2).
I'm guessing somebody just suddenly decided to buy a bunch of Xboxes in bulk.
Not at the freshly raised tariff-sensitive pricing. I think MS/Xbox is trying to wind down the Xbox Series X/S without causing too much of a panic. There will be all sorts of doublespeak.I'm guessing somebody just suddenly decided to buy a bunch of Xboxes in bulk.
ROG Xbox Ally shows they are willing to risk slapping the brand name on what is a bog standard x86 APU gaming PC, even in a handheld form factor that can have additional compatibility/control issues. But they modified Windows 11 to make it work better, not load explorer.exe by default, etc.:If normies try to play the PC games and are met with crashes, bugs, or errors because of the APU not being properly supported, they're just gonna give up.
It's like a beta test for a plausible strategy: stop creating consoles that try to compete badly in PlayStation's lane, losing money, and focus on keeping gamers using a version of Windows in all situations. If an $800+ Xbox Magnus comes out but doesn't sell well, wafers allocated to it can be shifted towards AMD dGPUs sharing the same chiplet, and they can again focus on improving Windows and making sure Game Pass doesn't crash and burn.The devices will ship with Windows 11; they will be the first Windows devices to support a new mode that boots the system directly into the Xbox app, without loading the full Windows shell by default. The mode provides a console-like experience with less resource and power consumption, with Microsoft estimating savings of up to 2 GB of memory and a two-thirds reduction of idle power consumption. This mode will be a timed exclusive to Asus ROG devices on launch, and will be made available to other Windows-based gaming handhelds in 2026. The Windows user interface also received additional features designed to improve navigation on game controllers, including additional system settings available from Game Bar, controller support on the lock screen, and a new task switcher design.
MS sure are having to issue a lot of denials these days.
ROG Xbox Ally shows they are willing to risk slapping the brand name on what is a bog standard x86 APU gaming PC, even in a handheld form factor that can have additional compatibility/control issues. But they modified Windows 11 to make it work better, not load explorer.exe by default, etc.:
this is straight up setting their sights on the steam deck. In a vacuum you can pretend that people who don't have steam accounts will see a microsoft store version as an equivalent but steam has like 20 years of consumer goodwill and extremely cheap games. that's not getting into the fact that steam's entire ecosystem is just better than the xbox one at everything it attempts to do and has been for years. i legitimately don't see them pulling this off, it's going to be yet another Surface debacle where they pretend decent but second rate product is a premium offering. if that's the ploy then i legitimately don't see anybody but retarded black teenagers and drug dealers buying the xbox handheld unless there's some crazy value proposition happening somewhere else.It's like a beta test for a plausible strategy: stop creating consoles that try to compete badly in PlayStation's lane, losing money, and focus on keeping gamers using a version of Windows in all situations. If an $800+ Xbox Magnus comes out but doesn't sell well, wafers allocated to it can be shifted towards AMD dGPUs sharing the same chiplet, and they can again focus on improving Windows and making sure Game Pass doesn't crash and burn.
Part of the hypothetical strategy is that Steam (along with Epic Games, GOG, etc.) will be allowed on the Xbox "console" (now a semi-custom APU gaming PC). It's the minimum that will have to work if the console is running a locked down version of Windows.this is straight up setting their sights on the steam deck. In a vacuum you can pretend that people who don't have steam accounts will see a microsoft store version as an equivalent but steam has like 20 years of consumer goodwill and extremely cheap games. that's not getting into the fact that steam's entire ecosystem is just better than the xbox one at everything it attempts to do and has been for years. i legitimately don't see them pulling this off, it's going to be yet another Surface debacle where they pretend decent but second rate product is a premium offering. if that's the ploy then i legitimately don't see anybody but retarded black teenagers and drug dealers buying the xbox handheld unless there's some crazy value proposition happening somewhere else.
The Verge: Xbox Ally and Ally X review: this is not an Xbox (archive)ROG Xbox Ally shows they are willing to risk slapping the brand name on what is a bog standard x86 APU gaming PC, even in a handheld form factor that can have additional compatibility/control issues.
Wccftech: ASUS ROG Xbox Ally X Review – This Is an Xbox? (archive)What does “Xbox” mean? Some might say it can only refer to a box-shaped Microsoft game machine. Others will argue it’s a collection of Xbox-native titles like Halo, Gears, Forza, and Fable. I think most would probably agree it’s a game console experience, a way to kick back and easily play the latest games without thinking too much. Press the power button, play, press it again to pause.
The 7-inch Xbox Ally and Xbox Ally X gaming handhelds, on sale tomorrow, don’t meet that bar. The cheaper one doesn’t even come close.
Ars Technica: ROG Xbox Ally X: The Ars Technica review (archive)The ASUS ROG Xbox Ally X is a powerful, capable, and comfortable PC handheld device, with a smooth user experience thanks to the new Xbox UI. It's really like taking your computer on the go, with all of your PC games in your hands. For its mix of improved hardware, user experience, and battery efficiency, it's arguably the best PC handheld device to buy on the market. It's not an entirely smooth experience though, with plenty of PC gaming hiccups interrupting the 'console-like' experience the device is supposed to provide, the fact that it actually doesn't let you play all your Xbox games, and what I still believe to be an exorbitant price tag, when cheaper devices can provide comparable experiences.
That coat of paint—what Microsoft is calling the Xbox Full-screen Experience (FSE)—represents the company’s belated attempt to streamline the Windows gaming experience to be a bit more console-like in terms of user interface and overall simplicity. While that’s a worthy vision, the execution in these early days is so spotty and riddled with annoyances that it’s hard to recommend over the SteamOS-based competition.
The last bunch of times Microsoft issued statements that they were not killing a product/product line, every single one was axed within 6 months.MS sure are having to issue a lot of denials these days.
Where there's smoke there's fire and I feel like if it's not 100% happening right now, there's probably at least discussions about pulling out of hardware.
I think what happened to the Xbox and what happened to the gaming industry as a whole were two separate issues that eventually intertwined.
Cliche answer, but I feel that the Xbox One reveal was the beginning of the end, not just for the Xbox brand, but for the gaming industry as a whole. Say what you want about MS starting the trend to charge for online multiplayer, but MS was proactive enough in following the inevitable trend of Internet usability where they could forgo a subscription model onto its consumers in exchange for quality games and a reliable service.
But, the Xbox One was inexcusable in its writing on the wall of how the gaming industry shifted their priorities towards greed and control. Forced gimmicks (Kinect, TV), shallow brand recognition (Halo, NFL), always online DRM for a weaker console compared to its direct competitor. Too little too late to backtrack (Game Pass, backwards compatibility, slimmer console redesign) since they're still shooting themselves in the foot with wanting to be a platform first, game brand second.
