Microsoft feeds you bullshit, and expects you to believe it

This annoys me quite a bit. When random people jump up to defend the corporation pretending to clarify matters, when instead they are bent on deception. And maybe are even on Microsoft’s payroll.

See this guy on Reddit.

It starts with:

I’m sick of seeing all the misinformation going around the gaming subreddits. It’s really frustrating to see people furiously hating the X1 without having all, if any, of the details. I’ll try and break this down for you guys so here we go.

Only that it’s filled with bullshit. A shameless attempt to justify what Microsoft is doing while relying on the technical incompetence of the average guy.

So let’s tear it all apart.

One of the X1’s main feature is the ability to install the disc directly to the hard drive and play it without a disk. Correct me if I’m wrong, but this is a feature many asked for when the feature was added to 360, but it was only to allow the game to run better.

Straw man argument. No one on the WHOLE internet has complained about the possibility to install games on the hard disk. This is not part of the discussion and it isn’t IN ANY WAY justifying the other aspects.

The trick being used here is already starting with wrong premises, so that the rest of the discussion is already derailed to serve the convenient purpose.

If you bought a disc based game, you can sell and trade it to any participating retailer. It means that game publishers will work out deals with retailers in order for the developers and publishers to take a cut of used games sales. Microsoft will not receive any money from these transactions.

This is uncertain due to the way Microsoft reconsidered their official position. They repeated more than once that a game changing hands would have to be “repurchased”. It could be that Microsoft doesn’t directly put a fee on the *transation*, but if there’s money that goes into paying the “license” for the game, that money goes to Microsoft.

So it’s just a way for Microsoft to take your money while hiding the fact behind smart use of words. “Microsoft does not charge a platform fee” but it can still (and probably will) charge the game fee.

It’s as if they draw the attention on one hand, while the steal from you with the other.

It’s instead funny that no one comments on the REAL issue: if the physical disc copy is always equivalent to a virtual/digital one, what’s the difference between an “used” and a “new” game? Bits aren’t consumed. A movie you torrent on the internet doesn’t get all scratchy the more copies you make. So what’s the point of buying an “used” game? Why should we care.

DRM–WHY?

As we saw above, you will be able install your games to your hard-drive and have your entire library available to play without putting the disc in the disc tray.

This is why the 24-hour check is required. Without this, many copies of the same game could be installed into multiple X1’s and it would be absolutely crumble game sales.

The drawback to this is not being able to game offline.

No, this is you being a fucking idiot. You are stating that the 24-hour check is REQUIRED so that one can install the game to the hard disk. Otherwise one could freely copy and play the game on infinite number of consoles.

You are stating this is the reason why the 24-hour check is required, and it is TOTAL BULLSHIT.

Why so? Because a very slight change of policy would retain the full possibility of installing every game, while making sure that (1) no piracy happens, (2) not require any constant online check.

How? By simply making sure that the new copy on a different console is ONLY activated AFTER the previous one is deactivated on the previous console. This simply means that before you can do this transition, you have to reconnect the first box to the internet and deactivate the game. This guarantees that only ONE copy is ever active AND that you can play offline indefinitely without online checks.

It’s like activating CD-keys on the internet. If the Xbox network knows your CD-key is active on some offline device, it will tell you that it’s “in use” and so can’t be activated on a new box. If you want to trade you’d have to deactivate the game on your system, and then trade the game. So that your CD-key is “freed”.

This requires an online check ONCE. When you activate or deactivate the game. After that you can play as long as you want. And the 24-hour online check IS NOT required.

As I’ve stated before, you will have the control to everything that the Kinect has to offer. If you don’t want it to hear you? You can do that. If you don’t want it to see you, you can do that. Don’t want it to listen for the “Xbox On” while it’s off, you can also do that.

If you want to learn more about the Kinect’s privacy settings, you can click this link

Yes, and you fail to understand (or pretend not to) people’s concerns.

1) No one TRUSTS Microsoft. That’s why whatever they write on their policy isn’t felt as a guarantee.
2) It’s written in policies that they can be changed at any time. And no one reads policies.

With that information given to you, what I believe is happening is simple. Microsoft is shipping a Kinect with every console because like this, if you own an Xbox One–you will aso own a Kinect. With this, I’m thinking Microsoft is ensuring the developers that the market is out there! In this move, Microsoft want the developers to explore the possibilities of the Kinect. They want newer innovations as they believe they’ve made a product with enormous potential. Why do you believe they were shoving the Kinect down everyone’s throat last E3? They wanted to expand their market.

I don’t know how much Kinetic costs. Say it costs $50. That means that Xbox ONE could launch at $450 instead of $500. I can assure you that they’d sell a lot more that way.

Most customers don’t care about Kinetic and Microsoft’s choice is to impose a standard that no one wants. It’s the same they did with Windows 8, imposing a style of interface that no one wanted.

Moreover, games based on Kinetic won’t magically sell, because people who don’t like Kinetic won’t magically start loving it. Bundles of shit you don’t want NEVER worked in any market, regardless of what market it is. When it’s about hardware it’s even worse. People want stuff that does one thing the best way possible. They don’t want “packages” put together through dumb marketing surveys that tell you what you’re going to like.

Same mistake being repeated = what happens when bureaucrats end up at the top positions. That’s what happens in a corporate-driven industry. The guarantee that incompetents end up at the top, imposing dumb choices on everyone.

P.S.

Just think of everything that can be developed for the Kinect. For example, Dead Rising 3 will have a feature where it will listen outside of the game through the Kinect. If you make a loud sound while playing, the zombies will hear you and they will come after you. This is the kind of thing Microsoft is looking for with the Kinect, innovation.

Most games out there that rely on “stealth” have HORRID game design. Like Metro: Last Light. Or Dishonored. They rely on the fact you can do all sort of unrealistic noise before they notice you. It would be great if a stealth game for the first time would actually make NPC reacts the way a player would. And put them and the player on equal footing (or at least try to).

Kinetic isn’t required for good game design, nor will help it. It’s only required for “sensational” sounding bullshit like the one you described. It’s a fucking game. I want it to behave coherently with the actual game, not react to my own noise.

P.P.S.
Unrelated to this specific discussion but relevant. On the argument Xbox vs Steam: http://www.quartertothree.com/game-talk/showthread.php?72831-The-XBOX-One&p=3397199&viewfull=1#post3397199

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