shinra-bansho
Member
I wonder if this was a condition for the EA Sports (timed) exclusive content.
By paying.Q: Will Xbox One allow players to trade in, purchase and play pre-owned games?
A: We are designing Xbox One to enable customers to trade in and resell games. Well have more details to share later.
no it doesnt
http://news.xbox.com/2013/05/qa
add this to op this is straight from ms official website
I bet there will be some kind of deals for used games from GameStop.
Sign me up
Um,
http://www.computerandvideogames.com/407912/microsoft-confirms-pre-owned-fee-for-xbox-one/
Activation fees are something I've long argued would happen and it won't be exclusive to the One.
Wii U saved.
The whole conference was a fucking farce. From the horrible screaming in the audience (either pre-recorded or some fake idiots) to the presentation itself. Also very disappointed in no Alan Wake 2.
Sony will institute the exact same policy, just watch.
Just like the PC.
fuck off, im done with videogames.
Considering the fee is for it to be installed and played without the disk, I highly doubt it is going to be for five or ten dollarsMicrosoft doesn't answer wither or not Xbox blocks used games. Thread Title reads: XBOX BLOCKS USED GAMES.
:/
As long as the fee isn't ridiculously expensive (aka another $60) I'm fine with this. $5-$10 and we're good.
Wii U saved.
Shame on anybody who buys this.
Fuck 'em all then.It is standard to block used since a couple of years (on PC). Would be interesting to see what Sony will be doing.
Game install fees? Total crap...
Installation required...
Who wants to wait for a game to install before playing it? Not me...
So if PS4 does this aswel then GameFly and Gamestop are toast?
This is the question to ask. If both go this route then there's not really a net loss since we'll all be stuck with the same experience.
Also, in before PC gaming = your only real future next gen.
But what if a second person simply wanted to put the disc in and play the game without installing – and without paying extra? In other words, what happens to our traditional concept of a “used game”? This is a question for which Microsoft did not yet have an answer, and is surely something that game buyers (as well as renters and lenders) will want to know.