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    How next-generation consoles may eliminate the used gaming market

    As metioned by Kotaku earlier today, Microsoft is reported to be testing a software or hardware method on the next version of the Xbox hardware designed to halt the ability to play used games. While this report doesn’t indicate that this feature will definitely be included in the next version, the appeal to developers and publishers is likely incredibly high. This type of solution would make it vastly more difficult for retailers like Gamestop to resell traded-in games for bloated prices, thus cutting into publisher sales. However, it’s also likely to anger consumers that want to unload old games on sites like eBay and severely harm video game rental services like Gamefly or Redbox.

    The most likely scenario of this protection method would tie anyone with an active Xbox Live account and Internet connection to a specific disc of a new game release. However, finding a way to bind one game per system in an offline environment may also strike a severely devastating blow to piracy. Since piracy has increased by 20 percent over the last five years and impacts the gaming industry’s revenue each year to a certain degree, this new system of protection may halt software pirates from distributing game data when the code will only work on the first console that it’s played upon.

    Gaming publishers have already been fighting the used game market by locking content within the game until a a one-time use code is entered. This allows publishers like Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment to lock Catwoman’s single player narrative within Batman: Arkham City or Electronic Arts to require a code to enable the multiplayer portion of Battlefield 3. Any consumer that purchases a used copy of these games from retailers or other sources is at the mercy of the publisher in regards to the amount of additional money spent on digital codes.

    Digital Download Countdown

    While this potential used game protection scheme is definitely alarming, the gaming industry is already in a transition period between physical disc sales and digital downloads. As broadband speeds and data caps increase over the next five years, downloading a future version of Call of Duty may become the preferred practice over waiting in line at the local Best Buy.

    Sony and Microsoft could also take a page out of Steam’s playbook and allow consumers to download the entire game in advance of the release date to balance server load, then unlock the ability to play the game at midnight. However, storage capacity of hard drives within the next generation of consoles would likely have to start around 500GB or 1TB to store multiple 20GB games. Similar to OnLive’s business model, cloud gaming could also be a potential solution introduced by Sony or Microsoft.

    Sony is already moving in the digital download direction with the launch of the PlayStation Vita. While physical Vita games are still sold within retail stores, the digital counterpart of those titles may be acquired for a cheaper cost through download. Since digital downloads cannot be resold, the consumer loses out on recouping costs after completing a game. If the used gaming market is eliminated, publishers may see a drop in sales across all new releases as many consumers that resold used titles to finance new games will ultimately be spending less on software.   

    According to a related report from IGN, the new version of the Xbox hardware is estimated to be six times as powerful as the Xbox 360. The system’s GPU will be based on the AMD Radeon HD 6670 and begin mass production at the end of 2012. Over on the PC, the Radeon HD 6670 includes 3D and 1080p output, DirectX11 in addition to multi-display output. However, other reports have indicated that the next Xbox will utilize the Radeon HD 7000-series GPU from AMD. 

    While Nintendo’s Wii U is rumored to have twice the processing power of the Xbox 360, the next version of the Xbox hardware, often called the Xbox 720 by journalists, is estimated to be approximately 20 percent more powerful than the Wii U. The Kotaku article also indicates that the next version of the Xbox will offer Blu-ray compatibility.

    This article was originally posted on Digital Trends

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    17 comments

    • Shick  •  29 days ago
      LOL @ "strike a severely devastating blow to piracy". Not going to happen. Pirates remove security protections and write code to bypass or break security. I have been hearing since the days of Commodore 64, about how so and so security will stop piracy, and soon after a pirate finds away around it.
    • Slam Maddy Easton  •  1 mth 0 days ago
      If Microsoft does that with the Xbox 720, and Sony does not do that with the PS4, then my days as an Xbox guy are done. I used to be a PS guy, anyway. No problems with going back. I'm not going to buy a game at $60.00, find it to be subpar, but then be stuck with a full price game that I can't sell off on Ebay or trade in at Gamestop. I rarely ever buy new releases unless it's something I KNOW I will like, like Halo, Elder Scrolls or Mass Effect. I won't ever by a new publishers game at full price.
    • Belial  •  Knoxville, Tennessee  •  29 days ago
      I will give up gaming if this happens. why make it so a person cant sell a old game they have beat or dont like any more or cant buy a used game to play for the heck of it? I see a gamer backlash coming on.
    • Shick  •  29 days ago
      On a side note, I always felt if I bought something, it's my property to do as I see fit as long as I don't try to pass off the copyrighted material as my own work.
    • sirius  •  Eagle Butte, South Dakota  •  29 days ago
      If microsoft does this and sony doesnt. Its a no brainer im going Sony. why do i pay every month to play multiplayer anyways..pfft
    • Myrtok  •  1 mth 0 days ago
      It's their right to sell their games according to whatever strategy they like, but making it impossible to re-sell a used game will hurt their sales badly. Besides, they are making a ton of money on the rental games - those rental companies have to pay royalties, and the game publishers wouldn't agree to that if it wasn't profitable. If the rental games go out without this one user system (as they would have to) then the whole idea falls apart. Microsoft isn't that stupid.
    • PerplexedByIDIOTS  •  1 mth 0 days ago
      If they lock games to eliminate re-sells I know I will be buying less games since I can't trade them in.

      I also dislike digital downloads. If a hard drive goes out (and they do) you have lost your entire game collection and will have to spend hours or days downloading them again.

      At least until the game companies realize that they can make extra money by charging you again to re-download a game you only bought once before.
    • Robert  •  29 days ago
      Bad idea all around... Gaming is a friends experience. If we cant game with friends then why bother. (I want to be able to take a new game over to a friends house to show it to him)
    • Shaun  •  Houston, Texas  •  29 days ago
      R E T A R D E D
    • SgtNutsac  •  Englewood, Colorado  •  29 days ago
      Not only is this a supreme bad idea, but its total Xbox suicide. If your console is stolen, broken, or goes bad, you have to get all new games? #$%$ If I get a used car is Chevy going to cry about it?
    • gopher10025  •  Valley Springs, California  •  29 days ago
      If they do this well I will be VERY picky on what I purchase and most of the crappy games will just be that crappy and no one will purchase them. As of now I purchase about 10 games a year new and well that would be blown down to about 1-2 Great games and I will just play other systems like my PC or something else to make up the diffrence
    • JR  •  New York, New York  •  29 days ago
      So when your Xbox gives you the red ring of death, you'll have to buy new games to work with the new console... yeah, that sounds like Microsoft...
    • Jim  •  29 days ago
      This wont happen. We already have digital downloads on the current systems and those sale are small when compared to physical copy's sold. Digital is good for Indy company's that cant afford to publish their game via physical content.
    • imautobot  •  29 days ago
      The current system where promo content is offered in a 1 time code is better than all the options presented here. At least that way, if the game gets resold, the buyer has to pay for the bonus content again. I know most people will disagree with me, but keeping revenue moving to the publishers is what ensures better games in the future. Gamestop profits at the suffering of the gaming industry. And indirectly this can result in worse games being sold to the consumer.

      I know everyone wants things on the cheap, but consider this. The average cost of a game has been fairly consistent since the Atari 2600 era. With the exception of the $10 increase seen between to previous and current generation. Now consider that in the Atari era, devs consisted of one or two programmers. Today, developers have 100+ people dedicated to producing just 1 game. It's illogical to expect the quality of product to rise without paying for all the hard work that went into the game.

      Either the direct or indirect cost of the game is going to rise, or the quality of the product is going to stay the same. Of course, the consumer always has a choice. This isn't THX 1138; where our government mandates you purchase 'Dendrites' everyday on the way home from work. You can always, refuse to pay. That has a tendency to tell the market what you're willing tolerate.
    • JenkemTheAryanApe  •  27 days ago
      Microsoft are so close to crushing Sony and Nintendo they really should not risk it by pulling a stupid move like this.
    • JenkemTheAryanApe  •  27 days ago
      If Microsoft did this it'd be the most idiotic decision they could ever make they are so close to crushing Sony and Nintendo they really shouldn't blow it by a stupid move like this.
    • No one  •  Ypsilanti, Michigan  •  29 days ago
      Say "gaming" . Say it SSSLLLOOOOWWWW... GAY-Ming Gay gay gay ming..... Sit at home #$%$ and playa your gaya games.
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