Xbox One games may come to Windows 10 PCs

07.06.2016
Microsoft recently released a preview of the Xbox One Anniversary Update that brings more Windows 10 to the Xbox. But if the latest rumors are correct, Microsoft wants to do a whole lot more by bringing the entire Xbox collection to Windows 10 PCs.

It’s no secret that Microsoft’s vision for the future of gaming involves combining the Xbox and Windows PCs, and a new report says this could be a very literal marriage. Microsoft has “ambitions to make Xbox One games playable on the PC” minus an Xbox in the living room streaming to the PC, according to The Verge’s Tom Warren. Currently, Xbox games can be streamed to a Windows 10 PC when both devices are on the same home network.

It’s not clear how this feature would work out, but Warren reports it could mean bringing the entire Xbox One UI to Windows 10 PCs. As the Xbox system is already based on Windows 10, that would mean tailoring the UI’s interactions for a PC.

It’s not clear, however, if the Xbox One UI would exist as an “app” inside Windows 10 much the way Windows Media Center did for entertainment PCs. Or, if there would be a special “Xbox edition” of Windows 10 for PCs. It’s possible that Microsoft doesn’t even know which route it will take—assuming the rumors are true.

The idea of an “Xbox edition” for PCs makes a certain amount of sense. A Windows 10 PC capable of playing Xbox games would still need to be a machine dedicated to the purpose—the PC wouldn’t be able to run these games without a healthy discrete graphics card, powerful CPU, and good amount of RAM. So why not create a gamer-dedicated version of Windows 10 to complement the hardware

Why this matters: Microsoft’s burgeoning Windows 10 era is all about multi-device compatibility. Making it possible to play Xbox games on a PC or console would take this notion to the extreme. It suggests a future where the Windows Store can be a one-stop shop for Xbox One console and Windows 10 PCs. That’s a future that’s already happening in some ways. Even though the game stores are currently separate, many Xbox One “exclusive” games from Microsoft Studios are coming to Windows 10 PCs via the Windows Store, as Microsoft announced in March

Before the PC-as-Xbox becomes a reality, however, there are numerous problems to consider. The most obvious one being that PC and console gamers have entirely different cultures. PC gamers may not take kindly to playing games designed for the console on their PC. That’s especially true if these Xbox One games have frame rates capped below (or even at) 60 frames-per-second.

Nevertheless, it’s an interesting proposition, and Warren says we may learn more about Microsoft’s Xbox One/Windows 10 PC integration plans during E3. The annual video game expo runs from June 14 to 16.

(www.pcworld.com)

Ian Paul

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