It’s been literal years at this point, but at this point it was also shown that it might not be a genuine announcement. Microsoft happens to be making a harder Xbox Series S to accompany the Xbox Series X; possibly the first rumors would be Project Lockhart. We receive this from what appear to be next-generation controllers who have made their way to nature, and all the symptoms involve a valid leak.
I guess an official announcement will come in a while later. The rumor has already announced this on one occasion this month, probably with the value and release date of Xbox Series X. That’s what we heard a little bit, and Jeff Grubb of Venturebeat reiterated today that we expect more data in the next 3 weeks. .
I wouldn’t be surprised if the company made some kind of allusion to the previous less expensive console either. The cat is out of the bag a long time ago, however lately the cat is out of the bag so evidently that any kind of popularity of Lockhart/Series S would be like making gestures and saying: look, a cat. This would not be the first time a company would modify an ad based on leaked information: I doubt we would move the occasion itself, but some kind of popularity would not be out of the question.
I’m excited about this. Of course, the Xbox Series X turns out to be like a beast, but a really low value can radically replace console racing in an attractive way. This would probably mean sacrificing 4K in many games, however… I think a lot of other people would be willing to sacrifice 4K for the right value. A genuine surprise would be something like $199, even if it’s as low as I expected. From Microsoft’s perspective, this would serve as a Game Pass machine, allowing others to connect to the ecosystem with relatively affordable hardware. We’ll see you soon, I guess.
I am a freelancer whose paintings have been published in The Atlantic, The New York Times, The New Republic, IGN.com, Wired and more. Canopy social games, video games,
I am a freelancer whose paintings have been published in The Atlantic, The New York Times, The New Republic, IGN.com, Wired and more. I sing social games, video games, generation and all that gray domain that happens when generation and consumers collide. Google