Xbox One:
family sharing feature could return, says Microsoft
Xbox One: will
Microsoft reinstate digital features including 'Family Sharing' mode?
Photograph: Nick Adams/Reuters
Microsoft is planning to reinstate key digital features of the Xbox Oneconsole, a senior executive has claimed. In an interview with US game site IGN, chief product
officer Marc Whitten hinted that the promising "Family Sharing"
feature, which would allow Xbox One owners to share their digital games with up to 10 friends, could make a return after the machine's
launch.
The concept was removed in June when Microsoft reversed on its initial plans to make the
new console effectively a digital-first machine, complete with daily user
authentication and a limit on physical used-game sales. Since then,
however, insiders have been questioning Microsoft's decision to throw out
all of its new digital features. An online petition has been started by Xbox fans,
requesting that the company reverts to its original plan – especially the
"Family Sharing" mode.
Responding to the petition, Whitten said that although there was no
"road map" to reintroduce the function, it was a distinct
possibility. "If it's something that people are really excited about and
want, we're going to make sure that we find the right way to bring it back,"
he said. "A 'road map' sort of implies more like 'on date X it's back'
than I think exists, but we believe really strongly in how you build a great
experience on Xbox One for me as an individual, but also for my family. Family
Sharing is a great example of how you do that with content. I think you're
going to see us, both with examples like that and with other things, keep
pushing on how that's something great. An example is some of the stuff we're
doing with what we announced around Gold, where other people in the house get
the advantages of Gold when I'm a Gold member. You're going to see us continue
to push in those areas."
After the new console was revealed in May, Microsoft failed to answer
questions about how pre-owned game sales and offline play would be affected by
its digital rights management, authentication and digital distribution plans.
An online backlash grew over the following weeks culminating in Sony's
combative E3 press conference, in which the PlayStation manufacturer assured
viewers that pre-owned game sales would be fine on PS4, and that no DRM would
restrict offline play. A week later, then-Xbox chief Don Mattrick released an
online statement rescinding most of the digital planning for Xbox One,
including the Family Sharing function.
At the time, the removal of several more attractive features was
criticised by some pundits who claimed Microsoft was throwing its digital toys
out of the pram. Whitten denies this, claiming that, to facilitate offline play
and a pre-owned market, the company had to redirect resources. "To add it
to the program, we had to make room, just from a pure engineering perspective,
to be able to get that work done. So taking Family Sharing out of the launch
window was not about 'we're going to take our toys and go home' or something
like that. It was just sort of the logistics of 'how do we get this very, very
clear request that people really want, that choice, and how do we make sure we
can do an excellent job of that, get to launch, and then be able to build a
bunch of great features?'"
Since the reversal in June, Mattrick has left to join social gaming
company Zynga, and Microsoft has shaken up its corporate structure, promoting
Julie Larson-Green from Windows to the head of the entire hardware division.
Gamers and industry insiders will be watching carefully to see how she adapts
the Xbox One proposition from here. Originally, alongside the family sharing
concept, it was hinted that the machine would also allow the resale of
downloaded titles, bringing a second-hand sales market to the digital model. If
Larson-Green wanted to make a positive impression before the launch of the Xbox
One and PS4 later this year, bringing both of these features back into the mix
my well be a smart manoeuvre.
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