Welcome to XboxIssues

Welcome. I decided to make this blog after being a Xbox Ambassador for a number of years.

If you don't know an Ambassador is a Volunteer that Microsoft uses to help ease the load on the actual hard working support people.

I noticed that alot of the questions I would get could easily be solved by using Microsofts Xbox.com site.

Since some of the help articles may be hard to find, understand or the issue may be called something different in the gaming community making it more difficult to solve, I've decided to make this blog to make it easier for fellow gamers to get xbox assistance, news and all things Xbox.

If you have any Xbox related question you can find the answer to feel free to contact me on YouTube, twitter or in the comments.

Thursday, July 2, 2015

NEWS: Bethesda doesn't know when Xbox will make Fallout 3 backwards compatible

Yesterday, Fallout 4 went up for pre-order on Xbox.com. Generally, this just means people can plop down money for a game that will release later. But, this circumstance is somewhat unique because Bethesda's offering a digital copy of Fallout 3 with Fallout 4 pre-orders.

According to Xbox, a code for Fallout 3 will be delivered seven to ten days after the pre-order is made. For now, Fallout 3 can only be played on Xbox 360, but "[it] will be included in backwards compatibility access when made available."

It's definitely planned, but no one's quite sure when it's happening. Even Bethesda doesn't know. When asked for a window that we could expect, a Bethesda representative told us
"In terms of timing, we don't know what the time frame is as to when backwards compatibility will happen." They went on to suggest that maybe Microsoft could elaborate when Fallout 3 would be included in the program.



The Bethesda rep did clear up one tidbit about the pre-order bonus, though. The version people will get is the base game, not the Game of the Year edition. They commented "It is the intention that the DLC will also be made backwards compatible, but it is not part of the pre-order program."
As of now, Microsoft's plans for backwards compatibility are somewhat nebulous. Currently, Xbox Preview members can access a limited number of games, and it seems as if that library will be expanded over time. Microsoft's said that sometime this fall it'll be made available to everyone with over 100 titles at roll-out and "hundreds more added every month."

Fallout 3 is the first example of this type of situation which explains the confusion around it. Once the program's running, things should go much smoother in the future. At E3 last month, Xbox told us that it expects publishers will jump on these kind of pre-order offers as a way to grow their IPs.
But, that isn't much consolation to people who just want to play Fallout 3 on their current console. Given Microsoft's uncertain window, there's an off-chance backwards compatibility won't come about by the time of Fallout 4's launch. You just might be stuck experiencing the Capital Wasteland on the last-gen system it was originally made for.

SOURCE

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