The Verge posted an interview with Phil Spencer. Not a lot of news, his vision seems to be consistent these days. He talks about subscriptions, selling consoles, scarlett (and there being one or two consoles) and their new studios.
Do you think you can release these too quickly? If the Xbox One X is the most powerful console, and then, two years later, there's a new more powerful console, doesn't that diminish what that means?
What I want you to think about in this is the players, not the specific version of a console they have. I think the question there is, "Is there a customer for the highest performing console, and are there enough customers where that makes sense?" If somebody bought an Xbox One X yesterday, I want them to feel completely that they can have a great experience for years and years. I also want to be as transparent as I can with them about the road map. So if somebody is sitting on the original Xbox One now, and they're thinking about an X, they can make their own decision about what platform they want to have.
I don't need to sell any specific version of the console in order for us to reach our business goals. The business isn't how many consoles you sell. The business is how many players are playing the games that they buy, how they play. So if somebody bought an original Xbox One from us on launch day, and they're buying and playing games, I don't need to sell them an S. I don't need to sell them an X. If they want to stay on the Xbox One they have and stay as a great member of our community or subscribe to Game Pass, that's a great business for us.
I think it's easy from the outside to judge the health of our business around how many consoles any company sells. In the end, how many subscribers you have to something like Game Pass, how many games people are buying, those are much better metrics on the health of the business.
So is Scarlett one console? Or is it like the Xbox One where you have a high-end, a middle class, and a cheaper one?
The video that we showed is talking about Project Scarlett. That's the focus that we have, on that console and hitting that specification. That's the console that we're talking about.
Can you explain in simple terms what xCloud is? There seems to be some confusion around it and how it's split into different parts with streaming and Remote Play-like functionality.
There are two things we'll talk about: console streaming and xCloud. xCloud is us putting Xbox motherboards, in an Azure data center, and allowing you to connect to those motherboards and play games on hardware that is ours. So if you don't own an Xbox or your Xbox isn't available, you can connect to xCloud and play those games. xCloud is us putting Xboxes in the cloud, and you're accessing those through a phone, which is our first focus. That allows you to take the gaming experience wherever you are. That's xCloud.
Now if you already own an Xbox One, you've already effectively bought the same hardware that we're putting in the cloud. So we challenged ourselves and said, "Well, can we allow you to turn your Xbox into your own data center, your own xCloud." So then you can stream the games you own from the console that you already bought to your phone for free. So that's what console streaming is. It is streaming from your console out of your home, the games that you own to your phone.
In the end, how you play is going to be the same. You're going to be sitting there on a phone, you're going to have a controller in your hand, and you'll be able to play those games. Console streaming means the source of those games is your Xbox at home; for xCloud, the source of those games is us. The end user experience, I want to be the same. I want to connect to Xbox Live, the games that I have access to, my friends, and I want to play wherever I go.
So game streaming is free...
Yes.
Xbox boss Phil Spencer on the future of gaming: “The business isn’t how many consoles you sell”
A deeper look at xCloud and Project Scarlett.
www.theverge.com