Why Microsoft’s next Xbox should just run Windows already

Date:

Share:




Microsoft’s “Xbox Series” consoles haven’t exactly been tearing up the sales charts.

Credit:
Microsoft

Microsoft’s “Xbox Series” consoles haven’t exactly been tearing up the sales charts.


Credit:

Microsoft

On the PC side, though, Microsoft is still a force to be reckoned with. Practically every desktop or laptop gaming PC runs Windows by default, despite half-hearted efforts by Apple to turn MacOS into a serious gaming platform. And while Valve’s Linux-based SteamOS has created a significant handheld gaming PC niche—and is hinting at attempts to push into the gaming desktop space—it does so only through a Proton compatibility layer built on top of the strong developer interest in Windows gaming.

Microsoft is already highlighting its software advantage over SteamOS, promoting the Xbox Experience for Handhelds’ “aggregated game library” that can provide “access to games you can’t get elsewhere” through multiple Windows-based game launchers. There’s no reason to think that living room console players wouldn’t also be interested in that kind of no-compromise access to the full suite of Windows gaming options.

Microsoft has been preparing the Xbox brand for this ultimate merger between PC and console gaming for years, too. While the name “Xbox” was once synonymous with Microsoft’s console gaming efforts, that hasn’t been true since the launch of “Xbox on Windows 10” in 2015 and the subsequent Windows Xbox app.

Meanwhile, offerings like Microsoft’s “Play Anywhere” initiative and the Xbox Game Pass for PC have gotten players used to purchases and subscriptions giving them access to games on both Xbox consoles and Windows PCs (not to mention cloud streaming to devices like smartphones). If your living room Xbox console simply played Windows games directly (along with your Windows-based handheld gaming PC), this sort of “Play Anywhere” promise becomes that much simpler to pull off without any need for porting effort from developers.

These are the kinds of thoughts that ran through my mind when I heard Bond say yesterday that Xbox is “working closely with the Windows team to ensure that Windows is the number one platform for gaming” while “building you a gaming platform that’s always with you so you can play the games you want across devices anywhere you want, delivering you an Xbox experience not locked to a single store or tied to one device.” That could simply be the kind of cross-market pablum we’re used to hearing from Microsoft. Or it could be a hint of a new world where Microsoft finally fully leverages its Windows gaming dominance into a new vision for a living room Xbox console.



Source link

━ more like this

Fujifilm’s X-T30 III adds a film simulation dial and 6K video

When Fujifilm launched the X-T50 last year, no one was sure what would happen with its aging X-T30 lineup. The company just answered...

Calls grow for business rate reform – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Analysis by Ridgefield Consulting, an Oxfordshire-based accountancy firm, reveals that hundreds of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) across the county remain disproportionately burdened...

Drivers warned of £1,000 fines this autumn – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

£1,000 fines for for driving with foggy windows this autumn Motorists are being warned they could be fined up to £1,000 for driving with...

London leaders launch inclusive talent strategy – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

The Mayor of London and London Councils today launch an Inclusive Talent Strategy for the capital, as Sadiq commits £147.2m to fund a...

Banking director on AWS outage and a wake-up call for the global digital economy – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

With BBC News covering live the Amazon Web Services (AWS) outage affecting leading UK banks, and global services, the incident bears striking similarities...
spot_img