Well I for one am going to take a more forgiving attitude toward microsoft. Negative reinforcement did its job, so now it's time for some positive reinforcement.
I just want to point out on this that it didn't have to be ten people from the same household, and they didn't actually have to be your family. You chose up to ten people in your list of friends (only requirement being they had been in your friends list for more than 30 days) and they became your "family", which meant you could share your games with those ten people.Nadia Castle said:"Could you share games with people across the world instantly?"
No, you could choose 10 family members, one of whom could access the games library of a main console on any system provided no-one else was playing it. Unless they had some super cloud computing as yet unseen this would presumably involve downloading and installing the game which would have taken a hell of a long time even with decent internet speed. So it was exactly the same as just lending someone an xbox 360 disk you aren't using, but with added inconvenience and restricted to ten people from the same household.
Seriously, how the hell could anyone call this a revolutionary feature with a straight face?
In that case, the transfer didn't work. Call customer support and let them know. They should be able to help you with your license transfer. Sometimes the transfers fail (really sucks since you can only do it so often), but they can usually get it taken care of with T3 support.MetalDooley said:That was one of the first things I did when I replaced my Xbox a few months ago.The games on demand titles I own still don't work offline for mebarbzilla said:Not true, if you are having this issue you need to transfer the licenses to your current Xbox. If the licenses are tied to the xbox you are on, you can play your games offline with no issues.
Are you familiar with Occam's Razor? The simplest solution is usually the most correct. That is, the solution with the fewest extraneous steps or assumptions. You're free to believe the extra steps of EA's Machiavellian scheming, but the fact remains it's far simpler to believe a business who enacted these schemes to get more money out of the consumer would drop them when it turned out they were not profitable.Seracen said:I'll own the fact that this may have been conspiracy theory. I'll even own that EA caved to bad PR and consumer hate (like the ME3 ending) from the "vocal minority."
However, until EA can prove itself back into my good graces, I won't stop considering it. The fact that EA has consistently hopped on the worst of anti-consumer policies does not help their case.
It's also why I'm unlikely to buy a One still. A hundred extra bucks for something I probably CAN'T use is just bad consumerism.idarkphoenixi said:The only way that price is going to go down is if they remove the mandatory Kinect. Which they are very unlikely to do.
852. I know my geometry!MeChaNiZ3D said:I'm not sure you know how many degrees there are in a circle.
They did. It's gone now, because of the reversal on the rest. There was literally no reason to change their DD method because of this, except maybe as a "screw you."Windcaler said:Im happy theyre reversing the decisions and it seems to me that if they really want to start a digital distribution system they should build that kind of store into the xbox.
What puzzles me about this mentality is that Microsoft's system was going to be region locked, so a lot of these examples seem like they wouldn't work. Maybe not LA to NYC or UK to France, but the guy who's in AUS and has family in the UK...What makes them think this would allow them to share?Nadia Castle said:If you have relatives or friends abroad then yes, its a good idea (not that I would trust Microsoft not to ruin it in execution).
If the transfer had failed then I wouldn't be able to play any DLC I'd previously purchased.All my DLC works fine though.It's only games on demand titles that give me any troublebarbzilla said:In that case, the transfer didn't work. Call customer support and let them know. They should be able to help you with your license transfer. Sometimes the transfers fail (really sucks since you can only do it so often), but they can usually get it taken care of with T3 support.
No - even more people complained about the PS3's price. Even when you needed spend more money to get the optional hard drive, optional wi-fi, and optional HDMI out for the XBox360 to match its specs.CaptQuakers said:Did this many complain about the PS3 price ? I don't remember this sort of backlash over a price.
You can still play your DLC and Games, provided you are logged into the account that purchased them. It doesn't matter if the licenses have been transferred to the console. I worked as a T3 rep for MSFT for 2 years. Give them a call, it can be resolved. If they say they can't do a transfer more than once a year, request to speak to a supervisor, they will get you transferred to a T3 agent (the ones that can actually help you). Be warned, they will try to talk you out of talking to a supervisor, and will likely say they can't do anything that they can not (which is true, the supervisors are generally just T1 agents who were promoted). Just tell them you "insist" on speaking to a supervisor.MetalDooley said:If the transfer had failed then I wouldn't be able to play any DLC I'd previously purchased.All my DLC works fine though.It's only games on demand titles that give me any troublebarbzilla said:In that case, the transfer didn't work. Call customer support and let them know. They should be able to help you with your license transfer. Sometimes the transfers fail (really sucks since you can only do it so often), but they can usually get it taken care of with T3 support.
Thank you very much for the info.I was starting to think I just have bad luck with getting stuff working offline.I've never been able to get Steams offline mode working properly eitherbarbzilla said:You can still play your DLC and Games, provided you are logged into the account that purchased them. It doesn't matter if the licenses have been transferred to the console. I worked as a T3 rep for MSFT for 2 years. Give them a call, it can be resolved. If they say they can't do a transfer more than once a year, request to speak to a supervisor, they will get you transferred to a T3 agent (the ones that can actually help you). Be warned, they will try to talk you out of talking to a supervisor, and will likely say they can't do anything that they can not (which is true, the supervisors are generally just T1 agents who were promoted). Just tell them you "insist" on speaking to a supervisor.
Steam I am not so sure about, you would have to look into it. If you find out, let me know. I have a buddy with that issue.MetalDooley said:Thank you very much for the info.I was starting to think I just have bad luck with getting stuff working offline.I've never been able to get Steams offline mode working properly eitherbarbzilla said:You can still play your DLC and Games, provided you are logged into the account that purchased them. It doesn't matter if the licenses have been transferred to the console. I worked as a T3 rep for MSFT for 2 years. Give them a call, it can be resolved. If they say they can't do a transfer more than once a year, request to speak to a supervisor, they will get you transferred to a T3 agent (the ones that can actually help you). Be warned, they will try to talk you out of talking to a supervisor, and will likely say they can't do anything that they can not (which is true, the supervisors are generally just T1 agents who were promoted). Just tell them you "insist" on speaking to a supervisor.