11 Things Microsoft Wants You To Forget About The Xbox One
With early-adopters buying into what have turned out to be complete lies, it'd be far better to just start over.
You'd think when you're plonking down upwards of £500/$700, the company behind the product in question would endeavour to make sure you feel comfortable and pleased with doing so. However, it seems that since day one both the Xbox hardware itself and Microsoft's responses haven't only managed to put one foot wrong, they've all but awkwardly salsa-danced themselves into an early grave. It's actually quite rare to see a company who were so far out in front in terms of public favour and mainstream opinion thanks to the 360, end up dropping the ball in such a spectacular fashion. But drop it they have, and in the past nine months since release it's been one cack-handed scrabble in the mud after another to pick it back up, with offers of a Kinect-less Xbox being the thing Microsoft thought may win them back the most public favour. If you remember the initial fallout from the reveal event and that now-infamous interview between Geoff Keighley and Xbox representative Don Mattrick, when quizzed on the necessity of upgrading to the new hardware the latter remarked "We have a product for people who aren't able to get some form of connectivity; it's called Xbox 360." Straight away things were just a little bit amiss in Camp Microsoft, and it was all downhill from there.