Survivalist Pro
Photo: Luriko Yamaguchi
"I want to play Halo Infinite immediately." Then I watched the episode covering the Xbox 360's infamous Red Ring of Death, a widespread hardware failure that cost Microsoft more than $1 billion to repair.
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Read More »Watching Xbox's Power On documentary, released last week for free on YouTube, was a delightfully nostalgic journey through Microsoft's 20 years in the game console market. A wide variety of interviewees and an honest assessment of the brand's highs and lows make the six-part documentary feel authentic.
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“We would recommend between $100 to $300 of cash in your wallet, but also having a reserve of $1,000 or so in a safe at home,” Anderson says....
Read More »The documentary doesn't shy away from this issue, and it's clear the people at Xbox felt terrible about it. Microsoft handled what might have been a brand-killing disaster as well as it could have -- by flinging $1.15 billion at the problem and tweaking later models of the console. "These were the darkest days of my career," Leo del Castillo, part of the Xbox hardware engineering group, said in the documentary. However you feel about the Red Ring debacle now, Power On is an engrossing watch. It addresses the disastrous 2013 Xbox One reveal, which put so much emphasis on the 360 successor's TV streaming and online capabilities that it alienated a chunk of the Xbox's core gamer audience -- including me. I bought a PlayStation 4 and dismissed that generation's Xbox completely. Despite this, I acknowledge that Xbox did incredible work in revitalizing its brand. Since Phil Spencer became head of Xbox in 2014, it's acquired killer studios like Minecraft maker Mojang and Elder Scrolls developer Bethesda, done stellar work reintroducing backward compatibility, created an irresistible subscription program in Game Pass, launched cloud gaming, introduced gaming to a wider audience through the Xbox Adaptive Controller and is giving the PlayStation 5 a run for its money with the Xbox Series X|S. This is all extremely admirable, and most of the documentary makes me feel warm and fuzzy about Xbox. But Microsoft trying to profit off the Red Ring left me with a sour taste, and I'm suddenly of two minds about playing Halo Infinite after all.
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