ĭuring Microsoft's E3 2017 press conference on June 11, 2017, backward compatibility for original Xbox games on Xbox One family of consoles was announced. Beginning in June 2009 the branding was phased out and the games were moved to the "Games on Demand" section of the store with Microsoft stating that they have "finished its portfolio" of Xbox Originals.
Microsoft launched the Xbox Originals program in December 2007 where Xbox 360 owners could purchase select original Xbox titles digitally if they did not own a game disc and such could be found inside their own section in the Xbox Live Marketplace. System link functionality between original Xbox and Xbox 360 remains available. Xbox Live functionality for original Xbox games were available until Apuntil support for original Xbox games were discontinued. Game saves and downloadable content cannot be transferred from an original Xbox to an Xbox 360. Original Xbox games must use the original game disc and can't be installed to the hard drive unlike Xbox 360 games. Supported original Xbox games will run each with an emulation profile that has been recompiled for each game with the emulation profiles stored on the console's hard drive. Subscribers to Official Xbox Magazine would also have updates to the backwards compatibility list on the demo discs included with the magazine.
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Updates to the list were provided from Microsoft as part of regular software updates via the Internet, ordering a disc by mail from the official website or downloading the update from the official website then burning it to either a CD or DVD. In order to use the backwards compatibility feature on Xbox 360 a hard drive is required.
Microsoft's final update to the list of backward compatible titles was in November 2007 bringing the final total to 461 Xbox games.
The Japanese market had the fewest titles supported at launch with only 12 games. When the Xbox 360 launched in North America 212 Xbox games were supported while in Europe 156 games were supported. Instead backward compatibility was achieved using software emulation. An official hard drive is required to play emulated Xbox games.Īt its launch in November 2005, the Xbox 360 did not possess hardware-based backward compatibility with Xbox games due to the different types of hardware and architecture used in the Xbox and Xbox 360.