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Release: Fall 2001
Microsoft, a company that had been involved in PC gaming
on both the hardware and software side for years—with
popular titles such as Age of Empires, Midtown Madness and
Flight Simulator, was brought into the console hardware
market when it was hired by Sega to design the operating
system for its
Dreamcast system.
At the 2000 Game Developers Expo, Microsoft
CEO Bill
Gates annoucned their own system: the XBox. The system would
carry a 733MHz Pentium III processor, an Nvidia graphics
chip and an 8GB hard disk. The system is powered by a
gaming-specific version of the Windows 2000 kernel.
Discussion following the XBox announcement was plagued
with both speculation and personal opinion. Some felt that
the XBox would take over the gaming market as Microsoft had
done with the PC market. (This notion was met with a mix of
praise and fear.) Others saw no future for the system, as
North American companies had been unable to break Japan's
hold on the console market since the
Nintendo Entertainment System. But if any company would
have a good chance, it would be Microsoft.
Today the XBox is one of the leading three systems,
side-by-side with the Sony
PlayStation 2 and the
Nintendo GameCube. At this point it isn't clear which
companies will ultimately prevail—all seem to be doing well,
(except, of course, for Sega, which ducked out of the race
in 2001). Microsoft built an impressive piece of gaming
hardware, and has signed on a good set of developers to
produce games for the system. The XBox was a little slow to
catch on a first, mostly due to its high price tag, but with
the introduction of the Live! service and an improving
library of games, XBox has made its way into the books as a
general success.
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