Skip to main content

Xbox One’s Achievements will follow you outside the game and watch you

Xbox One- Xbox LiveYesterday’s reveal of the Xbox One answered a lot of  long standing questions, but it created nearly as many. Rather than giving us all the details we hunger for, the presentation served as a general overview of the philosophy behind the new console: it is an entertainment hub, Microsoft’s long-sought-after Trojan horse into your living room.

There was one notable absence though: the Xbox 360. Microsoft had nothing to share with the millions of current-gen gamers that want to know what happens with their years-long investment in Xbox hardware. Not during the presentation, at any rate.

Although much of the gaming-centric news regarding the Xbox One is being held back for E3, we can confirm straight from Microsoft that Gamerscores and Achievements will carry over, and that the Xbox Live Gold subscription service will keep the same $60 annual fee.

“If you are an Xbox Live Gold member today, we’re not going to charge you any more. Everything goes with you,” Craig Davison, senior director for Xbox Global Marketing told us. “So your Xbox Live membership works on 360, [and] it will also work on Xbox One. Your Gamerscore, your Achievements, your reputation, your friends list – it all comes with you.”

Davison also noted that the friends list cap would increase from 100 to 1,000.

Multiplayer games will also be able to increase their player limits significantly in individual matches. So much so that most developers will likely be able to choose how many people can play in a single online game at a time, rather than have a limit forced unto them due to the technology.

This creates all sorts of new possibilities, especially with games originally developed, or at least envisioned for PC. A good example of this the Battlefield franchise: Battlefield 3 caps out at 24 players per game on the consoles, while the PC version maxes out at 64.    

“We haven’t even hit the ceiling, so we’re not even able right now to basically say ‘this is the limit,’ because right now it’s a lot,” Davison said. “Going from 512MB RAM to 8GB, it’s going to be amazing. It’s almost going to be like an MMO for every game. It’s that level of power, and that level of sophistication is what we’re talking about, so huge potential.” 

Achievements remain a core part of Microsoft’s social gaming strategy, but they will also be expanded upon. In-game cheevos will remain the province of a game’s publisher and developer, but Microsoft will now offer its own out of game achievements. What that entails is still an active discussion, but it might include things like watching a football game while simultaneously tracking your fantasy team using Snap Mode, or playing a game while connected via party chat to other gamers playing different games.

Davison was clear that Microsoft takes the value that gamers place on Achievements seriously. Hopefully, this means we won’t see Gamerscore bonuses being handed out purely for promotional value, say by watching a movie promoted by an ad on the Xbox Live dashboard. 

“We’re allowing game publishers, and even to some degree entertainment publishers, to take advantage of the Achievement system,” he said. “We’re pretty stringent though, because that currency, we don’t want to devalue it.”

Editors' Recommendations

Ryan Fleming
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Ryan Fleming is the Gaming and Cinema Editor for Digital Trends. He joined the DT staff in 2009 after spending time covering…
3 Xbox Game Pass games you need to play this weekend (May 3-5)
Senua in Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice.

Another weekend is upon us, and you're probably looking for some games to kill time with over the course of it. We're in a bit of a lull right now ahead of a flurry of releases starting next week, so it's a great time to dip back into the Xbox Game Pass catalog and check out some games that you may have missed. There are three games in particular that I think you should check out this weekend if you're looking for something to play.

One is an unsettling adventure that's getting an Xbox-exclusive sequel later this month. The next is a finely animated roguelike indie that recently made its way to Microsoft's gaming subscription service. Finally, there's a relaxing adventure that gives players a lot of freedom, yet is short enough to beat in a weekend. If you're having trouble deciding what to play this weekend, give one of these games a shot.
Hellblade: Senua's Sacrifice

Read more
All upcoming Xbox Series X games: 2024 and beyond
Senua's Saga: Hellblade 2

The Xbox Series X and Series S have now been out for three years, bringing better resolution, higher frame rates, and ray tracing to gamers around the world. And the upcoming Xbox Series X games on this list promise to continue to show off all those bells and whistles in fun, new experiences.

If you're eager to find out what Microsoft has in store for the years ahead, we've rounded up every game confirmed so far, including new offerings, franchise installments, and ports of existing titles. We're looking beyond the first-party projects here to encompass all the great games coming to this powerful piece of gaming hardware. Maybe some of them will end up being among the best games on Xbox Series X.
Upcoming Xbox Series X games 2024
The games listed below either have 100% confirmed release dates or solid release windows that we expect them to hit in 2024. Any games with more ambiguous release windows will be listed below the confirmed releases.

Read more
One of the best Tomb Raider games is coming to Xbox Game Pass
Lara Croft runs from a crashing plane in Tomb Raider.

Microsoft unveiled the batch of games coming to Xbox Game Pass throughout the first half of May. It's a smaller group of only four games, but all of them are neat additions to Microsoft's subscription service. Here's the full roster of games coming to Xbox Game Pass between May 2 and May 14.

Tomb Raider: Definitive Edition -- May 2
Kona II: Brume -- May 7
Little Kitty, Big City -- May 9
Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons -- May 14

Read more