Xbox 360 Boasts Greatest Release Schedule Ever ... Now What?

I've described this as the greatest year ever for video gaming, assuming of course you're an Xbox 360 gamer. Go figure, but Microsoft apparently agrees:

2007 will be a year to remember for Xbox 360 players – a packed release schedule offers a wide range of incredible titles including exclusive, genre-defining games such as Blue Dragon (Microsoft Game Studios - MGS), Project Gotham Racing 4 (MGS), Naruto Rise of a Ninja (Ubisoft), Viva Piñata: Party Animals (MGS), Ace Combat 6: Fires of Liberation (Namco Bandai Games) and Scene It? Lights, Camera, Action (MGS), not to mention some of the highest scoring games of all time in the form of BioShock (2K Games), Mass Effect (MGS), The Orange Box (EA) and the legendary Halo 3 (MGS), all of which have already been released or are set to arrive before the end of the year.

From the end of summer to the festive period, Xbox 360 boasts over 60 new releases contributing to a portfolio of over 300 high-definition titles.

Xbox 360 continues to hold the record for highest games attach rate across the globe, at 6.3 games sold per console. With life-to-date sales of 13.4 million consoles worldwide this represents incredible software sales.

This brings up two related points, both of which are somewhat important to me:

1. Microsoft has maintained a list of original Xbox games that work on the Xbox 360. Because this list has always been so horribly formatted, I created my own version, which is both nicer looking and more accurate. However,  this month, Microsoft released another update to the compatibility list, so I'll be updating my own list ASAP, hopefully today. Here's the thing: Now that we're two full years into the Xbox 360 life cycle, and there are over 300 original Xbox games on the list, this month's update will likely be the last I make to my version of the list. This topic just isn't as important now as it was two years ago.

2. With over 300 games now available for the Xbox 360, there's simply no way I can give this topic the ongoing attention it deserves. As such, I've decided to change the way I handle Xbox 360 reviews and articles on the SuperSite. Starting after the holidays, I will not be writing full-length reviews as I've been doing, but will rather write shorter write-ups, with ratings, perhaps through the blog. I'd like to change my coverage in the video game field to focus more on two things: The few stellar PC and 360 games that ship each year and the PC-to-360 connectivity features (Media Center, media sharing) that I've ignored so far. The weird thing is, I know some people will be freaked by this, while others will wonder what took so long. There's a lot going on here, but I still feel like no one really covers video games correctly. Too much of the "traditional" video game press is childish and full of profanity, which helps sell the notion that video games are not so much art as they are adolescent. I wish I could fix this, but clearly the industry is too far gone.

Anyway. I play a lot of video games, and that won't stop. Nor will the conversations about this. But I think it's time, two years in, to change the way this conversation is framed on the SuperSite. It's just getting too complicated and time-consuming to try and do it all.

Discuss this Article 7

mcopas
on Nov 29, 2007
You know what, I don't come to the SupeSite for games information anyway. There are plenty of other sites I can use for that (and not all are full of profanity).
weedmonk
on Nov 29, 2007
Sounds great. Looking forward to it.
joe-dokes
on Nov 29, 2007
I know you still think the Wii is a toy, but they are still sold out nearly nationwide in the U.S. a FULL YEAR after initial release. They are selling at a rate of about 4 times what the 360 is selling. The real game console story is not the 360 or PS3 it is the Wii, the little console that could. Regards Joe Dokes
daveinla
on Nov 29, 2007
Agreed, the xbox 360 might be the best bargain in terms of power/price, but it's no revolution in the gaming industry. It still attracts only the hardcore gamer geeks who like FPS, and car games. But the console that really changed the game (If I can afford the pun) and opened doors of sofa gaming to tons of people of all ages is the Wii. It's the only one that everybody likes (besides PS3 and Xbox fans) and can play with such a big variety of games. But the downsides is its graphics look outdated and games like FPS and racing games look crap on it... The ideal would be to have 2 consoles, or a PS3 or box 360 with Wii's controllers.
Dipsh t Admin
on Nov 30, 2007
"they are still sold out nearly nationwide in the U.S." True, no one can deny the sales of the Wii console. However, it has been shown that some of the places it was "sold out" was really not the case. They were purposely making the supply seem low to drum up additional demand. And I'm not really trying to knock the Wii. Nintendo has created a console that is truly liked by a wide variety of people. It's just that I'm not a hard core gamer by any stretch of the imagination, but I got bored with it quite quickly, even though it was novel and fun for some time. And the graphics are really relatively horrid.
RunTimeError
on Dec 2, 2007
"and games like FPS and racing games look crap on it." Who the f**ck plays FPS and racing games nowadays anyway? Oh yeah, single people.
RunTimeError
on Dec 2, 2007
"And the graphics are really relatively horrid." Gameplay, sir. Gameplay. I gave up on graphics alone after Doom 3 promised the world and then had me hunting for blue keys a la Doom 1. Yawn. (with the possible exception of Oblivion... even though I have to run it at 640 x 480 all settings min)

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