Kilteroff said:
Vocal minority ruining something that would have been great for the silent majority.
I happen to be 34, which is the exact average age of "gamers" in the U.S. I've been a gamer my entire life, my first toy was a c64. I was incredibly excited about xb1's feature set, and I was realllllly looking FORWARD to the "always on". I was looking forward to a Steam-like marketplace, looking forward to not having to patch every time I use the system, looking forward to not having to use disks to access games that are stored on the hard drive in the first place. These were GOOD things. They were PROGRESS.
Forums like this are full of 24/7 hardcore gamers who tend to be a little myopic, I used to be one. What you need to understand is that many people like myself don't actually game that often, we WANT the "set top box" that you sneer at so emphatically. I have a job, I have a family, I have limited time for playing games, and I am the majority... not you.
This was Microsofts chance to create and dominate a market, like Nintendo did with the first Gameboy. They could've left Sony to cater exclusively to the hardcore, and ruled the "adult" market that has income, limited time, and desire for home features like cable box passthrough (BRILLIANT btw), the kinect for kids and workouts, integration of our media (I have all premium channels and sports packages and netflix and hulu and a voice activated hub / search will be incredible), Skype integration, on and on.
Microsofts only error has been in acknowledging the bleats of the hardcore and giving up their vision, it would've been amazing.
Hrmm, I also work full time, have three kids and a fairly busy social life. Xbox was still going to provide nothing useful. If I want to play games,I want to play games. Not navigate through irrelevant advertisements, not have to faf about going through authentication procedures, If I want to "disappear" from the family for a couple hours to relax, I don't want to have to be mindful of where I can have internet access in order to do so.
They coined it as a full entertainment system. Well. So is the PC I am building. It will play games, movies, interface with my living room TV or stream to my media center, we can use it to access youtube to play TV shows for the kids or music when we want that. All of these features are free after the construction of the PC, which while more expensive initially will work out cheaper over a generations life time.
Simply put, The Xbox one is expensive, very expensive considering what you actually get for the purchase price. The now defunct limitations of the system were down right offensive.
I understand that not everyone understands PC's enough to build one themselves, but honestly education is your most valuable asset in life. If you're not particularly interested in paying through the nose for substandard products, and you have access to youtube, do some searching on the topic there and educate yourself. While the initial outlay maybe be more expensive (only slightly if you build to the same hardware standard as a console) the benefits are far reaching.