![]() ![]() This means today's potential Xbox One owners are faced with a choice: get a 3D camera and directional microphone array with their system or pocket $100.ĭon't get us wrong, Kinect 2.0 has its uses. Would-be purchasers are no longer forced into spending an extra $100 on a bundled Kinect 2.0 sensor that many see as incidental (no matter how much Microsoft insisted otherwise). To Kinect or not to Kinect?įurther Reading Xbox One review: More than a game console, less than a living room revolutionFor the average consumer, the biggest post-launch change in the battle between Xbox One and PS4 is probably the fact that you can now get an Xbox One for the same $400 as the PS4. With that in mind, it's time to revisit the state of the console wars as it stands today and potentially amend our launch day thoughts with the benefit of a few hundred days of extra experience. Today we have a fuller picture of the Xbox One and PS4 instead of a quick peek based on a few hectic usage days before "comprehensive" launch reviews. So naturally, our general opinions of the systems evolved as we kept using them over the weeks and months. In the intervening months, the system software changed through downloadable updates, and the game library grew with dozens of new releases. Those consoles, as they existed on their respective launch days, don't really exist anymore. But given every head to head needs a winner, we gave a slight edge to the Xbox One for its superior game lineup and media features. Back then, we didn't really recommend upgrading to either system immediately. It's now been nearly 10 months since we first sized up the launch day competition between the Xbox One and PS4 (and even longer since we took a holistic look at the Wii U experience). Further Reading Head-to-head: Everything you need to know in the PS4 vs.
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