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.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

NEWS: Microsoft wants to make a tournament out of every Xbox One game

Microsoft is diving headlong into the competitive gaming world and has announced a new Xbox Live Tournament Platform.

The Redmond company announced the new platform has been built as a new part of the Universal Windows Platform SDK. It short, the platform will allow developers to easily set up tournaments on the Xbox One, and hopefully in the future, Window 10 PCs.

Furthermore, Microsoft announced it is working with tournament large organizers including the ESL and FaceIt.

The end result for Xbox One gamers at home is they will have more multiplayer experiences for those who want to play competitively.



In an interview with techradar, Chad Gibson, Group Program Manager, Xbox Live also suggested tournament play could even be potentially extended to single player games. Solo experience could also become heated competitions in a race to get the best score a la the old leaderboards seen on Xbox 360 games like Geometry Wars.

"We don't think it's just limited to multiplayer games or any game where there's any form of competition or score comparison," Gibson said.

Gibson hopes every game will have game with competitive multiplayer will have tournament support. Ultimately, though, the platform is completely voluntary and developers can decide whether or not to adopt it.

Microsoft was not ready to divulge which developers and games have adopted its new tournament platform, but it claims to be working with key companies in the industry. So it might be some time before we see Microsoft-powered tournaments come into play on the Xbox One.

Source


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