Larian is having trouble fitting Baldur’s Gate III on the Xbox Series S, the lower-priced and lower-powered console in Microsoft’s ninth-generation lineup.

I was looking up more information on why there’s such an issue getting BG3 on Xbox, and found this article with a lot more detail on the topic.

EDIT: The issue isn’t graphics or frame rate; it’s memory. The article goes into detail.

  • DarkThoughts@kbin.social
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    11 months ago

    It really doesn’t. Consoles are a completely closed off system, to the point where modifying it can get you banned from online services. The Deck is the complete opposite to that, with Valve even explicitly encouraging you to tinker with it. It always has been advertised as being a full PC, because you can do all the things you can do on a PC. You can literally go into desktop mode and have your regular KDE Plasma screen.

    By your definition every gaming PC would count as being a console. That’s just nonsense.

      • DarkThoughts@kbin.social
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        11 months ago

        They weren’t gaming first, they were gaming only. You didn’t load up an office program on an atari or snes. That didn’t really change until they combined them for media purposes, like playing CDs, DVDs & BDs, and even that was extremely limited and without consistency.

        No idea what your homebrew / piracy paragraph is supposed to be in regards to this topic though. That’s not just not official, but straight up “illegal” in the minds of their creators. As a kid I personally owned one of those SNES adapters where you’d plug in a floppy disk and would rip the game from the cardridge into a rom. If we were caught with that we might’ve even got into legal trouble. On a Deck you can copy & paste all the files you want. You can download and run all the programs you want, albeit a tiny bit more restricted than your regular desktop distro. But in essence, it’s still a full fledged PC, with everything that comes with it, and you could use it just for non gaming purposes if you so wish.

        It’s simply that. A Linux PC in a handheld format.

        • Eccitaze@yiffit.net
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          11 months ago

          This is admittedly REALLY pedantic, but there were some non-game cartridges released for the NES and SNES, such as Taboo: The Sixth Sense (a tarot card reading program), Miracle Piano (a program for teaching how to play the piano), Mario Paint (a basic music composition and drawing program), and a modem add-on for the Famicom that supported banking, stock trading, and horse race betting.