My son and I want to play Justice League Heroes, but it says for Xbox. We have the Xbox 360. I’ve heard some games are playable on the 360 and some aren’t. How can I tell which are available for my system?
Thanks,
mm
My son and I want to play Justice League Heroes, but it says for Xbox. We have the Xbox 360. I’ve heard some games are playable on the 360 and some aren’t. How can I tell which are available for my system?
Thanks,
mm
Also note that you need to ‘install’ some kind of plugin to play it, you can either get through the internet or download the program and put it on a cd.
If your 360 has a network connection and is on xbox Live already, it does it automatically when you put in the original xbox disk. You don’t have to do anything beyond pressing A a few times.
One of my favorite old Xbox games, Voodoo Vince, isn’t on the compatibility list, alas. I think it’s because the company that produced it was a small endeavor that only produced that one game, and then disappeared. So, no company, no one to help program the emulation.
???
Voodoo Vince was published by Microsoft themselves.
And besides that, fixing the games one at a time is not how the Xbox -> Xbox 360 emulation works. Microsoft alone works on the emulation code and they do it in batches of games that use similar programming structures. Which is why something like Barbie Horse Adventures is backwards compatible and Voodoo Vince isn’t.
Well, that’s one theory.
I was hoping someone would pick up on my choice of which less than stellar game I used as an example.
“Published” and “programmed” are very different things. Microsoft provided funding and whatnot, but Voodoo Vince was actually written by programmers at Beep Industries. Beep was formed in 2000 and released Voodoo Vince in 2003, after which, according to a statement on the company website, “the company went on to enjoy great success as a clearance house for slightly used office furniture and computer equipment. The name and logo were left in a paper cup by the side of the road shortly thereafter.”
Because Vince was created by this small upstart, I reckon it’s not much like anything else out there, code-wise, and thus it would involve too much effort to program the emulator.
From their careers page:
I like these people.
Which doesn’t change the fact that Microsoft has all of the code in their cavernous office park somewhere and could set any number of internal teams on the job if they wanted to.