Microsoft Explains Digital Game Sharing On Xbox One

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Earnest Cavalli

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Microsoft Explains Digital Game Sharing On Xbox One



One of the most anticipated features of the upcoming Xbox One is its ability to "share" digital games between consoles. Here's a look at how that works.

"Everyone in your home can share digital games with each other," begins Microsoft's official explanation of the Xbox One's digital game sharing functionality.

"Your Xbox One can become your virtual game library filled with digital games that different people in the home bought. Anyone can pick any digital game on your Xbox One, sign in with their own gamertag and play - even if the owner is not signed in."

Neat, right? According to Microsoft, this functionality also allows players to "take their games with them." Once a title has been associated with your Xbox Live Gold account - and yes, you'll need a Gold subscription for almost everything mentioned here - you can visit a friend's house, fire up his or her Xbox One, and resume your game from wherever you last left it on your own console, even if your friend doesn't own the game in question.

On the topic of Xbox Live Gold, this digital sharing strategy also includes the ability to lend certain features of an Xbox Live Gold subscription to those gamers who might not want to shell out cash for Microsoft's premium service. To wit:

Here's how Xbox Live Gold members can extend Gold benefits including multiplayer gaming, Game DVR, SmartMatch and access to entertainment apps and experiences, including The NFL on Xbox, Skype, Internet Explorer:

At home: You can set up your console at home so that anyone who uses that console will enjoy multiplayer gaming and access to entertainment apps - even if you are not home or logged in.

On the go: You can log in at a friend's house and everyone there can enjoy multiplayer gaming and access to entertainment apps while you are logged in.

Though new functionality is always welcome, it seems odd that the Gold benefit-sharing system would require the subscriber to be present wherever the features are used. Why can't we share Gold features by simply sending a message over Xbox Live? Obviously it's to prevent people from enjoying stuff they haven't paid for, but it feels like this deal could be so much more enticing if only Microsoft's prime directive wasn't "stamp out piracy at all costs."

As usual, when it comes to fighting piracy, the only ones who really suffer are the legitimate users.

Source: Xbox Wire [http://news.xbox.com/2013/08/xbox-one-digital-games-and-live-gold]

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Altorin

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May 16, 2008
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This is information that would have saved microsoft a ton of headaches a few months ago.
 

Lightknight

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Nov 26, 2008
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Wait, I thought this was how things already work. If you buy something digital from your account, everyone on the console you've installed it on can play it. That's how it works on the ps3 too.

It sounds like the difference is the ability to easily peruse another user's library and install it while they're not around.
 

shirkbot

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Apr 15, 2013
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"Your Xbox One can become your virtual game library filled with digital games that different people in the home bought. Anyone can pick any digital game on your Xbox One, sign in with their own gamertag and play - even if the owner is not signed in."
Wait... Isn't this exactly how a physical game library works anyway? The only difference is that everything in on the HDD instead of on a shelf. It's convenient, but for console gamers it just adds an extra step to what they could do anyway.

Thought I do like this bit:

At home: You can set up your console at home so that anyone who uses that console will enjoy multiplayer gaming and access to entertainment apps - even if you are not home or logged in.

On the go: You can log in at a friend's house and everyone there can enjoy multiplayer gaming and access to entertainment apps while you are logged in.
Gold is usually a pretty bum deal, but this might help make it more palatable.
 

Tranquility

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Aug 4, 2012
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Current gen consoles already do this.

Blow more smoke and mirrors Microsoft, the mental midgets love it.
 

Falterfire

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MinionJoe said:
So game library sharing with friends and family is back in? I thought Microsoft had taken that ball and went home.
No. Not exactly. Maybe. I don't know. From how it sounds, your games can be active in a maximum of two places: Your 'home' console, and a 'roaming' console. You can play multi with two XBones and only one Gold account and digital copy of the game, but one of the XBones always has to be the same 'home' console, but the roaming one can change.

That's how I read the article at least, based on "At home: You can set up your console at home so that anyone who uses that console will enjoy multiplayer gaming and access to entertainment apps - even if you are not home or logged in." and "On the go: You can log in at a friend's house and everyone there can enjoy multiplayer gaming and access to entertainment apps while you are logged in."
 

PBMcNair

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Aug 31, 2009
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Falterfire said:
So... Basically how XBLA titles work now?
I was wondering that, I been playing PSN titles bought on my brothers profile, while signed into my own.
Is it the same on 360 ?
And the "take your games with you" is just cloud saves, a nice feature but one that's pretty much obligatory given how much they were trying to sell the "power of the cloud" angle, and it isn't exactly some new concept. And you'll still have to download/stream the games data.
Internet speed dependant, carrying a physical copy with you might be more convenient.

I have to admit that the Gold-sharing thing is nice though.
Earnest Cavalli said:
Though new functionality is always welcome, it seems odd that the Gold benefit-sharing system would require the subscriber to be present wherever the features are used. Why can't we share Gold features by simply sending a message over Xbox Live? Obviously it's to prevent people from enjoying stuff they haven't paid for, but it feels like this deal could be so much more enticing if only Microsoft's prime directive wasn't "stamp out piracy at all costs."
Does it say you have to be there ? I assume you could just give out your login, if you trusted the person enough. Unless signing into Live on a 180 has some kind of trick to it.
 

Roxas1359

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Aug 8, 2009
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So...basically it's what the PS3 lets you do now then? Okay, nothing special really then.

Lightknight said:
Wait, I thought this was how things already work. If you buy something digital from your account, everyone on the console you've installed it on can play it. That's how it works on the ps3 too.

It sounds like the difference is the ability to easily peruse another user's library and install it while they're not around.
For the XBLA titles you had to be signed into your account in order for the other person to play it, and if your account gets disconnected then they put a time limit, I think like 10 or 15 minutes, on the top of the screen and if you don't sign back into your account that person gets booted off the game. For PS3 it's you have a limit to 2 downloads on digital products and don't have to be signed into your account in order to access it. So basically you can go to another person's house, sign into your PS3 on their console, download some games for them, and then they can play them without having to be signed into your account.
 

rasputin0009

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Feb 12, 2013
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Shit, you're going to have to login with Kinect's facial recognition. That's definitely going to happen. So dirty.
 

fix-the-spade

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Altorin said:
This is information that would have saved microsoft a ton of headaches a few months ago.
Not really, in fact I'd say this raises a further headache for them, as they're still effectively putting single player titles behind a pay wall.

On XBLA right now games are tied to accounts (mostly) as opposed to hardware, whether you have Gold or Silver you can log onto any 360 and play your download games and use whatever features you have.

Now that's Gold users only, they want you to trade $60 for cloud saves. This being Microsoft I'm willing to bet they'll try to apply this to game discs in some way as well, they just haven't told us yet. Even if they haven't I can't see 'the internet' collectively taking this well.
 

Megacherv

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Sep 24, 2008
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Lightknight said:
Wait, I thought this was how things already work. If you buy something digital from your account, everyone on the console you've installed it on can play it. That's how it works on the ps3 too.

It sounds like the difference is the ability to easily peruse another user's library and install it while they're not around.
And how it'll work on the PS4. And what we assumed it would be after pulling the 180.

Is it just me, or does it seem to be a slow news week? What with such headlines as "Xbox One does something everything does" and "Nintendo character confirmed for Smash Bros.", I;m...I'm just not feeling it currently...

But, like, seriously, The PS4 does this, the PS3 does this, the 360 does this, I'm guessing that the WiiU and Wii both do this (I don't fucking know) and Steam does this to an extent...why is this so special?
 

CJ1145

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Jan 6, 2009
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Man, even when Microsoft does marketing right, we find out it's just what their competitors have been doing for years. I still haven't forgiven them for the shitstorm they caused, and then how they blamed us as if we were the problem. I really, really want the XBone to be a failure on the level of the sinking of Atlantis. Microsoft deserves to be crushed for at least one console generation, and more importantly they need to learn the lesson that trying to fuck your consumer just fucks you.

But people are going to buy it, and it will be a success. Because we are all idiots.
 

idarkphoenixi

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Microsoft actually explaining a feature of their product?

Hold on a sec...No, the moon definitely isn't blue, weird.
 

hawkeye52

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Jul 17, 2009
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So basically. We are being told to buy a feature. On a monthly basis through xbox gold. To do something that we could do already on every console before hand.
 

croc3629

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Mar 20, 2011
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I am pretty nonplussed at the whole "payed subscription to play the games you already own on another console" deal.

I would love an all digital future, but decisions like these make me more and more certain that our major providers of entertainment and blissful escapism will not be able to use their new-found power responsibly.

Please let me know if I have misunderstood what's going on here, because I just can't get excited about that.