I wish theyd stick to the core - show gamers what the xbox can do GAMEWISE and tack on all that other shit along the way. Kinect be it a failure AGAIN is still quite nice of a feature. I come in from work and say xbox on, netflix, option etc etc and its turned on my tv and started up whatever i want to watch all the while im doing other shit. I mean its not amazing by no means but i dont mind the little things it does do. However at the end of the day all i care about is the games i can play on it and its UI navigation(which is clunky atm).I does not bode well because exclusive programming is just the latest item in a long list of Xbox One specific features that got sent to the trash can. It also was a domain with a big potential for growth, so something for the long term. So getting rid of it is a bit like saying 'we don't believe there is a future in this.' You can argue that it might have been discarded because it was too far from their core business, but they are content creators with their many game studios and they were just following in the footsteps of Netflix.
D'oh Angel - just as an FYI - it takes a while, but if you could've dealt with the downtime of having it away, sending the unit to Sony and paying for it to get repaired last I checked was something like $60-80 with the NEWER units costing more to fix. And if they determine they can't fix it, they just replace it anyhow.My original 60GB, fully backwards compatible, PS3 died yesterday. I knew it was a matter of time because after about half an hour of playing, it sounded like a fighter jet was taking off next door. Even though money is pretty tight right now, I went out and picked up the 500GB Last of Us bundle. Even though the PS4 version comes out soon, I figure I can dump the game on Ebay and get $20 or so for it to help ease the sting a little bit. I'm really going to miss being able to play my old PS2 games on it though.
As I said, beginning of the generation, XBox 360 was my frontrunner winner. By the end of the generation, the 360 was disconnected to free up the HDMI slot and I was using the PS3 more than any other console.
360's are so popular in the "mod" scene to allow them to play burned games, look on any Craigslist and find dozens of dudes that can repair any 360 issue for the most part, and do it really cheap.[Note: My luck with repairs for the 360 on the other hand were the major reason I abandoned the system]
Oh that's a good point. Not really anywhere I won't go in terms of someone's house here in Phoenix.Might work in some regions - maybe even here - but I'm very leery of certain parts of Baltimore and from when I still cared about trying to fix my 360 back in the day I remember only seeing listings for places I would be scared to drive with a relatively sought after piece of electronics sitting in my car. Can't recall ever seeing a storefront that did it after we lost the one import store I was familiar with. (pre-360 for me, I got my first 360 about the time I finally quit EQ1)
Rather just pay the extra cost and not deal with the anxiety of such.