Microsoft do sell X360 games on their appstore, so there was a direct threat to their business here. First, XBox360 emulator Xenia was released for retail XBox recently.In this case, they have boosted the way they enforce their policy on emulatorsĪs to why this is happening now, when Microsoft have been rather lenient about it for almost 3 years, there are two leading rumors that have legs in my opinion: Microsoft, like other software companies, constantly evolve their products, policies, and how they enforce them.Emulators were never allowed on retail XBoxes, the only ways to get them to run involved loopholes.Microsoft haven’t specified why their are cracking down hard on emulators right now, but a few things are clear: Save yourself the trouble, get a dev account and enjoy the emus. Personally, comparing the state of XBox to PlayStation when it comes to hobbyists developers, I feel that $20 is fair if you’re looking for a powerful emulation machine.Įmulators have always worked in dev mode on XBox, while they’ve always been disallowed in retail mode, and the only way to get them to work so far in retail have been loopholes. It is still possible to run emulators on the console in dev mode, and people have mentioned that the dev license costs only $2 if you switch your dev account to a Turkish one. This week, Microsoft started enforcing their policy more strongly, and through some kind of signature check, now prevent people from running emulators on their console. In other words, if you managed to get an emulator to install on your (retail mode) XBox, it was yours to keep. Those folks were “stuck” with an older version of Retroarch, but could still run it, update its emulation cores, etc… (and very reminiscent of how we did our VHBL releases for the PS Vita back in the day). What changed this week for emulators on XBox – And how you can still run themĪlthough Microsoft would always take down these abuses of their appstore policy, in the past, people who had managed to download and install emulators such as retroarch, were able to access them and play them as long as they didn’t delete them themselves. In another case, developer tunip3 managed to find a way to get retroarch downloaded by thousands of people on their Retail Xbox, leveraging some loopholes in the distribution system of the XBox store, marking the app as a “private” build. Some devs have found ways to slip through the cracks of the review process, getting emulators on the appstore for a few days or weeks before Microsoft took it down. Nonetheless, developers have found ways around this restriction. Microsoft’s official Store Policies are very clear on emulators, it is not a gray area: Section 10.13.10 clearly states that “products that emulate a game system or game platform are not allowed on any device family”. Widely distributing it to all XBox users through the app store is another. Running an emulator in dev mode for your own tests is one thing. Notably though, emulators have pretty much “always” been disallowed on the XBox app store.
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