Gaming News

Microsoft Testing Free Online Multiplayer For Free-To-Play Xbox Games

An industry trend due to die is paid online multiplayer. Normalized in the early Internet era, companies convinced consumers that similar to how people pay for home Internet access, they should also pay for access to online multiplayer games. While Microsoft used to be the only company taking advantage of the practice, other gaming kingpins Sony and Nintendo saw no reason to turn down free money in the form of subscriptions for paid online services. Almost two decades after creating Xbox Live, Microsoft is now testing allowing players to play free-to-play games without having to pay for Xbox Live Gold.

Online subscription services were born in a time where consumers truly would never know how much work went into maintaining servers and low-latency game matchmaking. Microsoft, one of the largest and most wealthy tech firms on the planet, decided soon after their first system that Xbox players would need to pay in order to access online game content.

Now, almost 20 years after their maiden venture, consumers are wise to the fact that Microsoft pays almost nothing to maintain their Xbox servers. Players today still pay $60 for Xbox Live Gold, but in equal acknowledgement of the service’s ridiculously high price for product, players now also get multiple free games a month, asking why players even pay for online at all anymore when PC services like Steam and Epic Games have equal, or even more, monthly users, but don’t charge for access to online games. Microsoft seems to finally be stepping down from their no-exceptions policy to paid online.

Xbox Insiders in the Alpha and Alpha Skip Ahead program are now testing a version of Xbox Live which allows players to access free-to-play games and party chats without paying for online services. This move follows industry-wide backlash against Microsoft after the company proposed a price hike for Xbox Live Gold, meaning the company has likely been on internal damage control since people have become more aware of Xbox Live’s ancient service model.

There is no estimate when the test model will hit consumer Xbox systems. As of now, Xbox gamers are still expected to pay for access to online content in games as well as access to party chats.

Like
Like Love Haha Wow Sad Angry
Brandon Mumei

Recent Posts

‘Borderlands Mobile’ Is Here, It’s Free – And Nobody Saw It Coming

With no marketing, announcement, or trailer, Borderlands Mobile has just appeared on the App Store.…

2 days ago

‘Arc Raiders’ Update 1.23.0 Patch Notes: Vanguard Set, Delay & Riven Tides Preview

Players were frustrated when Arc Raiders Update 1.23.0 did not drop on April 7. Here's…

3 days ago

‘The Legend of Zelda’ Is Everywhere Right Now — Is A Remake On The Way?

The Legend of Zelda has been garnering massive attention from social media and gaming communities…

4 days ago

‘State Of Decay 3’ Alpha: Release Date, Features, How to Sign Up – & What Happened To The Zombie Deer

State of Decay 3 has resurfaced after six years of silence. Playtests are coming in…

5 days ago

‘Sigma Star Saga DX,’ One Of GBA’s Best-Kept Secrets, Just Got a Full Remaster – And It’s Worth Your Time

Sigma Star Saga DX, which is an enhanced remaster of WayForward’s 2005 Game Boy title,…

7 days ago

Glen Powell Had No Idea Nintendo Was Already Planning His Dream Role For Star Fox Film

One of the biggest surprises in the new movie, The Super Mario Galaxy Movie, was…

1 week ago