What’s next for Xbox: ‘Starfield,’ ‘Fable,’ ‘Flight Simulator,’ and a new Series S console
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© Provided by Geekwire Key art for Bethesda Softworks’ forthcoming space opera Starfield . (Bethesda Image)
Microsoft aired its pre-recorded Xbox Showcases June 11 to reveal what’s coming next for the Xbox video game platform.
It included a deep dive into the systems and design of the upcoming Starfield, an exclusive space-opera RPG from Bethesda Softworks; world premieres of new games from first-party Xbox studios like Compulsion Games and inXile; and new trailers for long-awaited Xbox games like Fable, Unavowed, and Hellblade II.
This year’s Xbox Showcase has been anticipated for weeks, with some analysts going so far as to consider it a make-or-break point for Microsoft’s Xbox business.
The news out of Xbox is largely mixed so far in 2023. The platform suffered from dead-on-arrival projects like Arkane Studios’ Redfall; critically successful but reportedly underselling releases such as Tango Gameworks’ Hi-Fi Rush; and a slight overall slump in Microsoft’s gaming revenue.
This comes as Sony reports its best year yet for the PlayStation 5, with a sequel to 2018’s Spider-Man coming this holiday season. And Nintendo reversed much of its own 2023 slump with extraordinary sales for its May 12 Switch exclusive, The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.
While Xbox isn’t doing that poorly per the numbers, its competition fielded win after win at a time when most of the news for Xbox has been mixed-to-negative. It’s left Xbox looking like the odd company out, and in need of an overall course correction.
If Microsoft agrees with that perspective, it wasn’t in evidence at the 2023 Xbox Showcase. While it did establish a few release dates and had a couple of big reveals, the Showcase further established that the rest of 2023 for Xbox rests on two big releases, Starfield and Forza Motorsport, as well as continuing to add big third-party releases as day-one launches on the Xbox Game Pass subscription service.
© Provided by Geekwire In space battles, players can either reduce enemy ships to scrap, or board them to take control and add that ship to their personal fleet. (Bethesda Image)
The bulk of the Showcase, over 45 minutes, was dedicated to Starfield, which releases on Sept. 6, and which is largely considered the hail mary for Xbox’s fiscal year.
The Showcase presentation included a series of extended looks at Starfield’s systems, including combat, exploration, world-building, character creation, its freeform approach, and the ability for the player to extensively customize and crew their own personal starship.
While Bethesda had previously disclosed that Starfield will feature over a thousand worlds that you’re free to explore at your own pace, the Showcase was the first time that its designers discussed the process thereof. Worlds in Starfield are procedurally generated, but are then populated with a variety of handcrafted encounters. No two players will see the same version of Starfield’s galaxy.
Starfield director Todd Howard also revealed that Starfield’s collector’s edition will come with a working smart watch that’s designed to match the official Constellation-brand watch that your character’s given in Starfield. That watch comes in a special hard case like the NASA-derived secure cases that are found in-game, along with an iron-on patch, a steelbook, and a digital download token.
To go along with the game, Xbox will issue an officially-branded Starfield Xbox Series X|S controller and a Starfield-branded wired headset. This marks the first time Xbox has issued a special-edition headset for a game.
© Provided by Geekwire (Microsoft Image)
The news from Forza Motorsport, the latest entry in Xbox’s long-running series of ultra-realistic racing games, was significantly less intense. Motorsport, now officially scheduled for release on Oct. 10, has officially partnered with General Motors, so players of the game will be able to collect, customize, and drive the 2023 Cadillac Racing V-Series.R and 2024 Chevrolet Corvette E-Ray.
In a surprise announcement, Microsoft will issue a brand new version of its award-winning Flight Simulator next year. Microsoft Flight Simulator 2024, made in partnership with the French studio Asobo, will feature additional activities such as search and rescue flights, aerial firefighting, hot air ballooning, experimental planes, and running a VIP charter service. No release date was offered.
Xbox’s Phil Spencer briefly took the stage at the end of the Xbox Showcase to announce that “we have heard your feedback.” Microsoft plans to increase the available supply of Xbox Series X units in stores, and will release a new edition of the all-digital Xbox Series S.
This new Series S features a 1-terabyte solid-state drive, up from the 512 GB drive in the current model, and comes in a new color, Carbon Black. It will ship for $349.99 on Sept. 1.
© Provided by Geekwire The new model of the Series S features a new color scheme, alongside a bigger internal hard drive. (Microsoft Image)
Spencer also raised a few eyebrows by wearing a T-shirt that featured the box art for the 1995 PC game Hexen: Beyond Heretic, created by Raven Software.
In a fully-calculated media event like this one, it’s difficult to imagine that Spencer just rolled out of bed and grabbed that shirt, particularly as Activision Blizzard currently owns Raven Software. It’s entirely possible this was a subtle hint about what’s first on Spencer’s agenda if and when Microsoft’s acquisition of Activision Blizzard goes through.
In other first-party news for Xbox Game Studios:
© Provided by Geekwire Hazel, the protagonist of Compulsion Games’ South of Midnight . (Microsoft Image)
To summarize: Xbox’s first-party plans for the rest of this year all rest firmly on Starfield, and to a lesser extent, Forza.
However, 2024 will see Fable, Avowed, Hellblade II, South of Midnight, and a new Microsoft Flight Simulator. If there’s a quiet subtext to this year’s Xbox Showcase, it’s “wait until next year.”
Other reveals at the 2023 Xbox Showcase included:
Xbox Game Pass releases for the rest of 2023 include Payday 3 (Sept. 21) and Cities: Skylines II (10/24), in addition to Starfield and Forza Motorsport.