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New Collection Coming:
Since the last generation of consoles, the gaming market has seen a swath of remakes, remasters, and collections put out to scratch that nostalgia itch many players have. Among the more popular collections out is Halo: The Master Chief Collection, which remains an active title on Xbox platforms thanks to the suite of campaigns and multiplayer options available to players. However, if a new insider report turns out to be true, another Xbox franchise will be getting similar remaster treatment within the near future.
Halo: The Master Chief Collection originally released in November 2014 for Xbox One, teeing up the release of Halo 5: Guardians a year later. The collection originally included the full campaigns for Halo: Combat Evolved Anniversary, Halo 2 Anniversary, Halo 3, and Halo 4, along with a large multiplayer suite featuringg several original and remastered maps and modes. Other games like Halo 3: ODST and Halo: Reach would be added in later updates to fill out the collection to include nearly all FPS Halo titles.
WoW On Xbox:
I watched Duke Nukem Forever emerge from its tomb, dripping with amniotic fluid, after an unprecedented 15- year development cycle. I can go play the long-gestating S.T.A.L.K.E.R., and its many spinoffs and expansions, right now on my Steam account. Final Fantasy XV finally left the assembly line at Square Enix, same with Persona 5 at Atlus, and I still go watch the Beyond Good & Evil 2 E3 trailer when I need a lift. (I'm holding out hope, Ubisoft. Always and forever.) But for my money, the greatest remaining white whale in gaming was first speculated about on Blizzard forums in 2004, right as we were getting our feet wet in the arcadia of Azeroth: "Man, do you think they'll ever port World of Warcraft to consoles?"
Those hopes never came true. The Alliance and Horde have dispatched countless evildoers across eight different expansions — cleansing this universe of all scum and villainy, to the point where players are traveling to the literal afterlife to find someone else to fight. And yet, Blizzard's flagship MMO remained exclusive to those who wielded a PC. Yes, the company has flirted with cross-platform migration in the past; Hearthstone can live on your phone, Diablo III on your Switch, but Azeroth was never accessible through an Xbox. For whatever reason, that was a third rail in Irvine. But as Blizzard gets profoundly reshuffled with a new set of owners, maybe, for the first time in WoW's venerable history, all of that is going to change.
Secret Feature:
It may have taken eight years, but one of the best PS5 features – which it inherited from the PS4 – is now finally available on Xbox Series X and Xbox Series S consoles: your TV speakers will now automatically mute whenever you connect a wired or wireless pair of headphones.
However, this fancy new Xbox feature is actually turned off by default, which means that many of you might be blissfully unaware of its existence unless you’re the sort who diligently follows each and every Xbox system update.
If you’ve ever used a wired or wireless pair of headphones on Xbox Series X, you’re probably used to picking up the remote controller and turning down your TV speakers. It’s something that I’ve grown accustomed to over the years because unlike the PS4 and PS5, which automatically mutes your TV whenever a headset is connected, the Xbox One and its subsequent models never did.
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