
Imagine buying a second-hand DVD from a shop. You take home your purchase, put it in your DVD player and then settle down with a significant other or group of friends to indulge in an evening of cinematic entertainment.
You and your present company sit through the usual copyright warnings, trailers and menus when BAM! The DVD stops playing, and tells you that if you want to watch this movie with your friends, you will need to pay £10 before you can continue. There would be an absolute uproar, and rightly so.

Xbox boss Asha Sharma has discussed how component shortages will impact the company's plans for Project Helix.
This kind of proves this is an after thought product, most products like this are in r&d 5 years before they start mass producing. So they typically have the cost of components and things worked out long before assembly starts.
This is an assumption still, but I wouldn’t be surprised if project helix is similar to Scalebound,perfect dark and sod3. They had an idea but no actual execution other than concept stage. Being impacted by the ram shortage likely would also put this device 3-4 years out.
I’m not even sure MS has that endurance with Xbox yet
Helix is going to be stupidly expensive
Instead of leaning into smarter upscaling techniques they're brute forcing hardware that will cost them dearly and it remains to be seen if it's genuinely going to provide a meaningful differential
I know in the oc.doace people like to brag about not using frame gen or dlss to get to high on a game but for the majority of players they happily use those technologies without a second thought
That's going to be ps6 vs Helix
It's called systematic inflationary. Yes we get it Microsoft, keep raising in the name ofall kinds of stuffs
Honestly if there was thing I learned from this generation is that new consoles arnt day one anymore.
I can wait 1-3 years.

New report from Skillsearch found that 22% of those surveyed had been laid off within the past 12 months.

It's a step forward for Stop Killing Games.
The argument is fallacious. He's equating a fee to access online features with a fee for accessing a movie on a dvd. It would make more sense if the dvd in the example were to charge $10 to access the commentary.
If [used game price] + [online pass] < [new game price] then you're still getting a good deal. I don't see what all the fuss is about. Further: if you don't care for online features, you have no need for this online pass.