One Xbox would never have been enough. Xbox One made sure of it: Microsoft’s 2013 console, designed as an all-in-one entertainment system, had difficulties right out of the gate. It was an innovative, expensive piece of tech that was way ahead of its time - so much so that the world roundly rejected its always-online aspirations, sending Microsoft into a tailspin of U-turns and compromises. Sony pounced upon its opportunity to come back from PS3’s disastrous debut - the “This is how you share your games on PS4” video will live in infamy - and swept the generation. This generation, however, Xbox is firing back with both barrels.
The momentum is usually with the underdog: we saw it last generation with Sony, as it worked to fix its poor policy decisions with PS3, while Microsoft took on the far less clearly defined task of figuring out a vision for the future of videogame consoles. This time, it’s team Xbox that’s had seven years to lick its wounds and come out fighting. But it’s done more than that. With the subscription model of Game Pass and an unselfconscious focus on PC cross-play, it’s built an ecosystem designed to extend the reach of Xbox beyond the flagship console, designed to meet potential players where they’re at. It has paid close attention to the way in which our relationship with media has changed over the past seven years. And in spite of Sony’s dominance over brand perception, with PlayStation positioned as the place to play exclusives, it has set itself up for success by working to understand and meet the practical needs of 2020’s consumer. A generation of social media users who have eschewed newspapers in favour of free-to-read websites, we want things fast, we want them easy and we want them cheap. We want it all our way, essentially. Xbox, it seems, is happy to give it to us, confident in the knowledge that, one way or the other, its generosity will pay dividends down the line.