Putting the 'role' back in role-playing games since 2002.
Donate to Codex
Good Old Games
  • Welcome to rpgcodex.net, a site dedicated to discussing computer based role-playing games in a free and open fashion. We're less strict than other forums, but please refer to the rules.

    "This message is awaiting moderator approval": All new users must pass through our moderation queue before they will be able to post normally. Until your account has "passed" your posts will only be visible to yourself (and moderators) until they are approved. Give us a week to get around to approving / deleting / ignoring your mundane opinion on crap before hassling us about it. Once you have passed the moderation period (think of it as a test), you will be able to post normally, just like all the other retards.

Microsoft Store & PC Game Pass Thread

Kem0sabe

Arcane
Joined
Mar 7, 2011
Messages
13,076
Location
Azores Islands
Managed to finally get it working. I used the powershell to download the old xbox live app, logged into xbox live through there, then the new xbox beta app started working. After that all the games started working.

Another issue i had was with the installation directories, i downloaded FM 2019, and started downloading all the fan mods, especially important is the German national team name fix, that you have to install in the game directory... now finding that game directory is a fucking nightmare, hidden behind god knows how many sub folders within the appdate user folder instead of being installed where i pointed it to be installed, along all the other windows store games in the windowsapp folder.
 

Black Angel

Arcane
Joined
Jun 23, 2016
Messages
2,910
Location
Wonderland
Ye, it needs work. Alot of it.

Exodus is installed and when I try to start it wants to login to Xbox Live. How can I even start it from my already logged in Xbox app and then ask for another login when Im already logged in is a mystery. Then when I click change the acc and select the only one it logs me in and again starts the loop of asking for login. Cant even Alt-F4 it and got to end it from task manager. Piece of shit.

Rest of the games installed like Void Bastards, Halo Wars and Slay the Spire work like a charm. Its just Exodus that is a massive pain in the ass.
They probably want you to go to Epic instead

aliens.png
 

J_C

One Bit Studio
Patron
Developer
Joined
Dec 28, 2010
Messages
16,947
Location
Pannonia
Project: Eternity Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 Steve gets a Kidney but I don't even get a tag. Pathfinder: Wrath
Ye, it needs work. Alot of it.

Exodus is installed and when I try to start it wants to login to Xbox Live. How can I even start it from my already logged in Xbox app and then ask for another login when Im already logged in is a mystery. Then when I click change the acc and select the only one it logs me in and again starts the loop of asking for login. Cant even Alt-F4 it and got to end it from task manager. Piece of shit.

Rest of the games installed like Void Bastards, Halo Wars and Slay the Spire work like a charm. Its just Exodus that is a massive pain in the ass.
They probably want you to go to Epic instead

aliens.png
Epic Store or the MS Store? Which is worse and why? Discuss!
 

DalekFlay

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
14,118
Location
New Vegas
I watched the Phil Spencer interview on Giant Bomb and I give him credit for saying it will be many years before streaming could possibly replace local hardware. He basically said they're launching with the idea of it being purely a supplement for trips or commutes, and will not compare to the real thing until a lot of internet changes take place. That's a lot more honest and forthright than Google and their "4k 60fps!" nonsense.
 

Infinitron

I post news
Staff Member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
97,236
Codex Year of the Donut Serpent in the Staglands Dead State Divinity: Original Sin Project: Eternity Torment: Tides of Numenera Wasteland 2 Shadorwun: Hong Kong Divinity: Original Sin 2 A Beautifully Desolate Campaign Pillars of Eternity 2: Deadfire Pathfinder: Kingmaker Pathfinder: Wrath I'm very into cock and ball torture I helped put crap in Monomyth
https://www.pcgamer.com/xboxs-phil-spencer-on-game-pass-steam-and-the-epic-games-store/

Xbox's Phil Spencer on Game Pass, Steam and the Epic Games Store
Microsoft's executive VP of gaming also talks about Flight Simulator's return, Age of Empires 4, and acquiring Double Fine.

CCeFadaxQrpacpkciVLZXD-320-80.jpg


On Monday, the day after the Xbox E3 briefing where Game Pass for PC was revealed in full, I had the chance to sit down with Microsoft's executive vice president of gaming Phil Spencer. We talked about the company's approach to selling PC games, its relationship with Steam, and many other things. It's a long read, but hopefully it'll give you a comprehensive overview of where Microsoft sees itself within PC gaming as it stands.

Plus, it was a good chance to ask about the current status of Age of Empires 4.

Samuel Roberts: You're very candid about your history with PC, like in your post last month...


Phil Spencer: You think I should hide it? You think you guys won't find it? [laughing]

I feel like you're paying close attention to how you're perceived. How much do you pay attention to the granular feedback of Microsoft's recent past on PC?


Being honest with you, I'm probably reflecting on more on how I feel as a gamer about our own performance as I am looking at feedback. Games for Windows Live, yeah, I've seen the articles, I've seen the comments, but also I play our games, I play our games on PC. I learned to game on PC. It's not hard to look at actions we've taken over the years through the lens of me as a PC gamer and say 'these are the things that are going to make me question your commitment or motivation to PC gaming', and that's just from my heart more than from a message board or something. I get both, obviously.

So what does Game Pass represent in the Xbox journey on PC?


A couple of years ago, more than a couple now, Microsoft Store and Windows launched, we had [UWP] games in there. One of the challenges I had in that time [was], what value were we uniquely bringing to the PC gamer? Between GOG and Steam and stuff there were solutions. If you wanted to go buy PC games, there were solutions for you to go buy PC games. If you were a developer who wanted to reach millions of PC gamers, there were stores that allowed you to reach millions of PC gamers, so it was a little bit unclear what value-add we were bringing other than another storefront.

After I gained a little more control, I guess, in what we were going to do in that space, sitting back in the team and saying 'okay, what unique value can we add in PC?', one was to continue to ship our first-party games on PC and on Xbox at the same time. Obviously we build those games, that's unique to us. And then Game Pass, as we watched over the last two years there's tremendous success we've had on console, and it's actually been healthy not only for the player but also the creator community in helping them reach new customers. We said 'okay, maybe Game Pass is something we could bring to PC'. We went out and talked and did some focus testing, and went over to my friends at Valve, talked to them about it, and say 'hey, how do people think, is this something we think would be additive to what is already there?'. We got a lot of 'yeah this is something you guys should go try', to build a gaming subscription that's working for you on Xbox to PC.

What that meant was we were going to have to have a way of downloading and entitling games on PC, so we effectively were going to have to rework our store, which you can see from the Xbox app now.

But then I didn't want people to think this was our attempt to go and push all the other stores out of the way. In fact, if you want to buy games from us, we want to give you a choice where you buy those games. So the announcement of Halo MCC coming to both Steam and our store was us saying you should be able to buy the games where you want to buy them. We want to make sure the communities are all connected, so we obviously had to work with Valve ensuring that regardless of where you bought the game you'd be one community of PC players together. But Xbox Game Pass for PC was really something that we thought that we could bring that was unique to that ecosystem.

With Steam specifically, what's your philosophy around releases now? You've named some of the games that you're going to bring to Steam—is your long term plan to bring your back catalogue to Steam and every new game, or is it more selective than that?


I wouldn't say it's more selective. My expectation is that our games will be available on Steam. You can never say 'always ever', because then something will happen with rights in certain situations where something might not happen, but we have a really good relationship with the team over there. We go over and talk with Scott Lynch, Erik Johnson and Gabe a lot about the plans we have—it's a good, healthy conversation. So there's nothing in our plans that would say there's a reason we wouldn't continue to ship our games on Steam, and they've been incredibly supportive with us which I appreciate.

On the back catalogue, it's just work, honestly. It's just physics. Are we going to be back and—let's pick something, Fury3, I'm showing my age now—I don't know, honestly, on the back catalogue. It would just be about finding the right time to go do it—is there enough demand? I love what we're doing with [Age of Empires] right now, taking the Age franchise and bringing it back. I love what we're doing with Flight Sim, but obviously Flight Sim is a new build of that franchise which looks fantastic. The back catalogue is a good question. We don't have a great answer for you right now, but it's not out of the question by any stretch.

Is it more challenging for multiplayer-focused games like the Forza Horizon games and Sea of Thieves that are already released?


No, not really, we've done a good job working with Valve around the multiplayer systems. Let's pick Sea of Thieves because I love the game. I think Sea of Thieves might have been our most requested game to come to Steam, which I thought was interesting—after we did the announcement of Halo: Master Chief Collection. Halo was clearly number one!

With Craig [Duncan] and the team at Rare, and the roadmap of what they're doing with Sea of Thieves, we'd obviously have to wrap it in the Steam installer—it's just work. It's not massive work, it's just work in going in and making it happen. Nothing to announce. I'll say Valve has been great to work with, so there's nothing in the relationship that would make it difficult for us to go do that. It would just be finding the right time to go do it. And do we really add something new? I guess that's just a customer that says 'there's no way I'm going to buy it from the store' that we have, and I'm not trying to manipulate what they do through that. The game is available for sale and we're saying 'hey we want to be big supporters of Steam', but I know some people very much want all of their library in one place and I understand that.

You mentioned wanting to get your games onto as many platforms as possible. Does that include the Epic Games Store and GOG?


GOG has some specific rules that they set, as does Epic right now, about what games we can put [on them], what other stores they can be available in. We're still in the situation of what I said in the blog post of, we recognise that there are other stores out there. We want to be supportive of the other stores that are at scale—because I can also spend a lot of time porting to a ton of different stores and not actually make progress with the games, which I think is the most important part. Focused on Steam because it's the biggest and they were very supportive of the work we wanted in order to make sure our ecosystem stayed connected. So always looking at the future, there's nothing against GOG or EGS that says we wouldn't be able to support those, but right now we're focusing on the two stores that we've announced.

Your strategy is moving towards more openness and choice. What do you make of Epic Games' exclusive strategy on PC?


We're taking an approach of, as you say, open, and going with the approach that people should be able to buy the games in the stores that they want. But I'm not...Tim is someone I've known for years, he's a friend of mine, he's a got a strategy that they want with Epic. I believe that Epic is working from what they believe is what's best for both them and their creators and their players, and I've never seen them act in a different way, so I'm not judging.

We're picking a different strategy. I guess we'll see, in the end, what works. But I think all-up Epic has been incredibly important to gaming, not just PC gaming. The role that Unreal has played over the years in unlocking creators at all different levels, the games that they've built—I've got a ton of respect for them and they're trying to go do. They're taking their approach and I get it, and we're just taking a different approach.

Why did you bring Flight Simulator back? What led to that moment?

We do have some pilots on the teams that are big fans of flight, and flight sims, and flying themselves, who are passionate about it, so we said, 'okay, let's see what we can do'. Flight Sim was a game in our past that sold millions and millions of units and had a very, very passionate community—in fact, they're still out there. So, okay. Can we do something new with Flight Sim? Can we actually move it forward in an interesting way?

I remember in February or March we were looking at gameplay that we had the option to bring and it was pretty close to what you saw on stage, we saw it [during the Xbox Briefing, the room just went silent as we were looking at this. Afterwards, it was Shannon Loftis [GM of Microsoft Studios Publishing] who brought it in, who happens to be a pilot, and I said, "is that the game?"

"Yeah, that's the game."

'You're going to have to put at the bottom that that's in-game. because nobody's going to believe that's in-game." You notice the video says '4K in-game'. And then I said, "why does it look like that?". There's 2 petabytes of geographical data behind that game, that they're then using as your AI to stitch the seams together so as you're flying, you're seeing a seamlessly connected Earth. I was like "you've gotta put that in the video because it's one of the coolest things I've ever seen". It's using real geographical data, real weather data, to give you the ability to literally fly around what looks like a living planet.

That's new. To me, that's exciting. They can do it on Xbox and they can do it on Windows and it look like that on stage. This whole thing—'can we really put Flight Sim in an E3 press briefing, because Flight Sim's kind of its own thing, some people don't even call it a game'. But it was visually stunning in my mind. Maybe I'm a little bit too close to it.

To a PC-specific audience it shows you're conscious of them and of your history as a company.


So I'm glad you picked up on that. So Sarah Bond, who's our head of global partnerships, came out, did the Game Pass work with the indie montage and all those games that were coming to Game Pass, then announced Xbox Game Pass for PC and Xbox Game Pass Ultimate. The next games that were there—I didn't know if the PC community was going to be watching or not, but we went Flight Sim, we went Age, we went Wasteland—I wanted people to know that we want to make sure we're building games and supporting games that respect what the PC community loves.

The first game we announced in the subscription was Football Manager. We know that's a huge game on PC. They don't bring it to console—they reinforced that today, they're not bringing it to console—so we want to make sure that PC players understood that we're going in with our hand open so you can see what our motivation is. We're going to really put our development capability behind what we're saying.

On a similar note, you threw a lot of support behind Age of Empires, which has been good to see. Age of Empires 4, though—it's been very quiet on that front.


We'll talk about it more this year. Relic's great as a studio, we're making good progress with it. One of the things I loved about our show [on Sunday] is the things that we didn't show. We had 60 games, 14 first-party games, with 12 shipping in the next year. And then I know, like okay, what's The Initiative working on? Where is Age 4, how's that going? I think Playground has a second team, what's going on with that? Where's Turn 10, they didn't show up?

So it was cool for us to be able to have a such a full show, and have some things like Age 4 that have been announced and haven't been shown in a while, other things that maybe aren't announced, to still be able to have those for us to continue to drive excitement, both through the year and potentially even next year's E3. But we'll talk more about Age 4, yeah.

Anything more you can say about it?


No, I want us to make sure we're doing that in the right context. The thing I would say is we've been incredibly impressed by Relic's capability. Obviously they're somewhat local to us being in Vancouver, and we know the studio. They did the best job of, 'here's what we think Age should go to'. And the other thing I'll say is, we are learning a lot revisiting Age 1, and Age 2. Those communities continue to exist, and they have large player bases, and there's a lot of feedback. So we're really getting good insight—even here as we're putting Age 2: Definitive Edition, which is playable on the floor, from those communities about things they'd like to see in Age 4, and that's important for us.

You've announced the acquisition of Double Fine and you've made a lot of acquisitions in the past year. Do you think you're done?


No. I don't think we're going to add eight more in the next year, but I think for us our first-party capability is really important. We don't have a quota. We could go two or three years without buying another studio—we could go forever without buying another studio. It's not something that we're checking a box, that we have to make sure every time we're standing on stage somewhere that we're announcing new studio acquisitions, but we can find great teams where we think we can add to their stability and capability as an organisation to build great things, and that was the conversation we were having with Tim [Schafer]. Having a great first-party organisation is critical to our long-term strategy. We're always talking to partners about what opportunities there are.

With Game Pass, I'm curious if you think that's going to affect the landscape of the traditional 60 dollar game, and I wondered how your acquisitions tied into that, because Double Fine doesn't really make those kinds of games. How much do you think about the different types of games that people play when you're making those calls?


Yeah, it's kind of two separate things. Definitely we think about the portfolio of our creative capability as it exists when we think about adding a new team and say 'do they bring something new?' You think about Double Fine and Brutal Legend and the games they've done over the years, Psychonauts. The thing I really love about Double Fine is they create high quality games that probably sit outside of the mainstream target of a lot of people, but they're able to do really unique things in what they build, which I think is awesome.

In terms of the impact on retail, just to use that, at any price point really, what we've seen on Xbox is games going into Game Pass actually sell better than games than games that aren't in Game Pass. The reason is, when your friends list lights up with 'everybody's playing Outer Wilds' or something, you don't really know how they acquired the game, but if you never heard of the game, or you're wondering why so many friends are playing, you're going to go and check it out. It's a great way for those games to gain exposure, to gain players, word-of-mouth recommendations.

The number one thing that causes me to buy a new game is not a review or something else—no disrespect—but it's what my friends say. If my friends say 'yeah this is something you would love', that's huge to me, and 'let's play together', that's doubly huge to me. What we're seeing in Game Pass is it's an incredible way for creators to put their game into a community, which is really what Game Pass has become—a community of people that love to go play that frankly have a shared library. If you have any kind of game with co-op or competition in it, you instantly have millions of people that not only can play your game but can play together and become people that advocate. Many of the people, when they see the games being played, they're going to choose to go buy it, because not everybody's going to subscribe. We're not trying to build a world where you must buy or you must subscribe, we want to give you choice as a player.

The redesigned storefront was a long time coming, I think. What was behind the decision to tie that into the launch of Game Pass as opposed to launching it earlier? Obviously you've had several years now of launching your first-party titles on PC.


It goes back to that dialogue around 'what are we doing when we come to PC?'. I didn't just want to put another storefront out there because there are great storefronts that are there. Our differentiation we saw as Game Pass on PC, so it was just natural to us. Some preview people got it early, so it's not like we tried to hide it and make it some big reveal on stage, but we really looked at Game Pass as the thing that would become the service that made the new Xbox app have a reason for why it was coming. In a lot of ways, having Master Chief Collection start coming to PC was our content reason for the subscription—all of these things were coming together, which was nice.

Even if you look at the games that are available in our storefront to buy, we're really going to focus on the games that are in Game Pass or maybe even some of the franchise extension of those games at first. We're not out there saying 'we're going to bring every game that's available on other storefronts to our storefront', we're going to focus on the games that are linked in some way to the things that are in Game Pass at first and see where it goes.

You have started making PC-only games. Do you have any more planned? How much do you think about PC exclusives?


I'm not a big exclusives person. I wanted to clarify with some things on stage, like with Minecraft Dungeons, it's going to be available on Xbox One and Windows PC. I think our players should expect that most of our games will be available on both platforms. There's certain things like [Age of Empires 2: Definitive Edition] that was written as a Win32 long ago with a different version of DirectX, trying to get that thing to come over is not completely impossible, but for most of the games—we definitely want to have a sensibility around where this game is primarily focused. When we say we want you to be able to play the games you want to play where you want to play them, we don't want to exclude console just like we don't want to exclude PC.

I think our fallacy in the past was when we said we were coming to PC, it was really 'how do we go port our console games to PC'? Sometimes even doing some silly things like not even having an exit command on the main menu of the game, which maybe we did in the last couple of years, which was really to me just showing that we weren't really leaning into what it meant to build a PC game, a game that the PC community would love. But I don't like to use exclusivity to drive things that we want to have happen. I want to put choice out there for our customers so they can vote with where they want to go play. It's why Game Pass Ultimate was important for us, so if you're someone who plays on PC and console you can subscribe to one thing, you get access to both subscriptions, you're able to play in both places. We see a lot of that. We see a lot of people who play certain kinds of games on PC, certain kinds of games on console, and certain games like Minecraft or Fortnite or something that they play on any screen that's in front of them.

There's been a big emergence of these subscriber models with Ubisoft announcing theirs this week. What do you make of that? Do you think the market for that might reach critical mass?


I definitely think you're going to see a few subscriptions be really viable. I don't think you're going to see one to rule them all, and I don't think we're going to see a hundred different subscriptions. For us we have a unique position as a platform holder on both Xbox and Windows, we're able to do things like Game Pass Ultimate. We're pan-publisher. We have over a hundred publishers supported right now in Game Pass. We've supported EA Access on Xbox since the day it launched, so we're not about excluding other people from investing in their business models and what works for them. I'm pretty certain today that Game Pass is the biggest gaming subscription out there, almost certainly. I do think for us as we get to scale very quickly—[Sunday] was a record-breaking day for us with Game Pass signups—that there will be a critical mass of players and games in that, that we think is very healthy. But I don't think we're going to see a hundred successful gaming subscriptions, I do think it'll consolidate down to a more manageable number for people.

You say the day of your E3 briefing was a record day for Game Pass. On PC were you happy with the results?


It was incredible, seriously, it was—in fact I might even have said that our team sandbagged our internal forecasts a bit—but no, it was great, which means something. I'll say our relationship with the PC community has been one of rebuilding trust, and yes people are just signing up, people are just trying now, we can still mess it up, but from the announcement of Master Chief coming to PC, to the Xbox game bar and us trying to create real functionality. Not all PC gamers are going to use it, but we're trying to be very explicit that we want to bring value there to the redesign of the Xbox app. I really do appreciate the PC gaming community's early vote of confidence—I guess it only cost a buck to try [laughs], but seriously, we fundamentally believe we need to and have to be, and should be a constructive part of the PC gamer's lifestyle. Not the only part, but a constructive part of that. The early results even in 24 hours on PC Game Pass have been really great.
 

DalekFlay

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Oct 5, 2010
Messages
14,118
Location
New Vegas
They said the same stuff with Games for Windows Live, it's all PR. Only thing that matters is do they bring the games and are they solid ports. I've heard Forza and Gears the last few years have been good ports, so that gives me hope for Halo. That's all that really matters.
 

hpstg

Savant
Joined
Nov 14, 2014
Messages
485
Ye, its a tricky move. Like Netflix for games.

Only this time they will have alot more "exclusives" to pump into service in next few years.
So far its been State of decay, Forza Horizon, Sea of thieves and Crackdown on release and some low budget stuff since GamePass started.

On a plus note, after Windows updated itself the Metro download works.
One bad thing when it comes to their store is that there is no speed limit cap on downloads, when it starts downloading it just eats all the bandwith and everything else dies on AC wifi.
This is the sign of a bad router, usually. Try to get your hands on something that runs OpenWRT, if possible.
 

Markman

da Blitz master
Patron
Joined
Dec 31, 2002
Messages
3,737
Location
Sthlm, Swe
Serpent in the Staglands Codex USB, 2014 Shadorwun: Hong Kong
Think I paid some 80 or so euros for that router.
It will work till it dies.
Steam and uPlay got download cap setting, wouldnt be too much of work for the largest software company in the world.
 

Straight elf

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Feb 1, 2009
Messages
347
Location
Brussels
Strap Yourselves In Codex Year of the Donut
So if I pay 5 dollars or whatever to the Nutella guy, will it give me an access to an ever-expanding pool of games to play as I wish (as long as I keep on paying)? Or is there a chance they will replace some games with other ones in the future, causing me to lose access to my games (say just before the final boss battle)?
 

Nano

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Mar 6, 2016
Messages
4,648
Grab the Codex by the pussy Strap Yourselves In
So if I pay 5 dollars or whatever to the Nutella guy, will it give me an access to an ever-expanding pool of games to play as I wish (as long as I keep on paying)? Or is there a chance they will replace some games with other ones in the future, causing me to lose access to my games (say just before the final boss battle)?
It could go either way. The solution is to just not pay for any of these shitty subscription services and instead pay for/p***** offline games for you to keep.
 

Markman

da Blitz master
Patron
Joined
Dec 31, 2002
Messages
3,737
Location
Sthlm, Swe
Serpent in the Staglands Codex USB, 2014 Shadorwun: Hong Kong
They add/remove games all the time on Xbox game pass.

Dont think they remove it from your library if its already installed. They even announce "last chance" to install before they are gone.
If you like the game you can buy it to "own" it and you get 20% off with gamepass sub.
 

cvv

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Mar 30, 2013
Messages
18,075
Location
Kingdom of Bohemia
Codex+ Now Streaming!
I wanted to try the Gamepass, just for shits.

Downloaded the app, launched it, got a message that my Windowz needs an update.
Weird, it auto-updated like two days ago.
Aight, go for it.
It's been almost an hour now. AN HOUR. And the damn updater thing has been stuck at 85% for about 10 minutes now.
Can somebody explain to me what the fuck is going on? I haven't seen such a massive update since the early days of Win10 beta.
 

cvv

Arcane
Patron
Joined
Mar 30, 2013
Messages
18,075
Location
Kingdom of Bohemia
Codex+ Now Streaming!
Ok so the update started about 9:30 AM, finished 10:35. After THREE restarts.
The last screen thanked me for my patience and informed me that this update is there to protect me "in the online world".
Finally the Xbox app booted and after checking all the available games I found out there's only one I want to play and still don't have - Metro Exodus.
Goodbye Xbox Pass. Now off to try PS Now.

EDIt:
I'm like "Hey PS Now, you look sexy, can I stream Bloodborne to my PC?"
And PS Now is like: "Fuck off dirty Slav, I'm not available in your poorfag country."

:hero:
 
Last edited:

GrainWetski

Arcane
Joined
Oct 17, 2012
Messages
5,081
Welcome to the M$ store downloader. Forza Horizon 3 got stuck at ~60% and then restarted about a dozen times for me. Fun times.
 

Duraframe300

Arcane
Joined
Dec 21, 2010
Messages
6,395
https://www.gamestar.de/artikel/gog-galaxy-groesste-innovation-der-e3,3345341.html
Uns gegenüber bestätigte Karwoski bereits Microsoft als Partner: »Wir haben Phil Spencer unsere App gezeigt und er war sofort begeistert, weil dieses Zusammenführen von Plattformen ja genau das ist, was Microsoft ebenfalls vorantreiben möchte.« So könne man unter anderem Game-Pass-Spiele in Galaxy 2.0 integrieren. Man sei aber auch mit fast allen anderen Plattform-Anbietern im Gespräch und bekomme bis dato sehr positive Signale.
 
Joined
Jan 14, 2018
Messages
50,754
Codex Year of the Donut
it's like these PR people read the studies about how 'everyone is a gamer' then skipped over the part where 90% of the non-asian/white males are playing shitty mobile games
 

As an Amazon Associate, rpgcodex.net earns from qualifying purchases.
Back
Top Bottom