Microsoft Xbox 360 HD DVD

02 MAY 2007
Launch price £130.00

Stuff says

The 360 is still an impressive games console, but it’s a poor solution to your HD DVD/Blu-ray dilemma
* * *
  • Pros Cheap way to get into full-HD viewing. Simple to use. Built to last
  • Cons Doesn’t deliver 1080p, despite claims to the contrary. 1080i images flawed. No HD sound

The format war between Blu-ray and HD DVD was always going to be ugly, but its Hiroshima moment might well have been the launch of the Sony PlayStation 3. Overnight, half a million Blu-ray players had homes, even if the homeowner didn’t know what a Blu-ray player was.

Microsoft knew the PS3 was coming. Having had its feet firmly in the HD DVD camp virtually since day one, one of the globe’s mightiest companies brought all its know-how and marketing prowess to bear – and delivered an add-on HD DVD drive. As a cost option.

To 1080p, or not to 1080p?
The ‘premium’ Xbox 360 package (fundamentally a regular 360 with 20GB hard drive) costs £280 – add the HD DVD drive and you’re up to £410. One the one hand, that extra £130 buys you the UK’s least expensive HD disc source; on the other, the drive only works when connected to the 360 USB and utilising its component video or VGA outputs.

Ah yes, the VGA output. According to Microsoft, the HD DVD drive offers 1080p video (the Holy Grail of image quality) when connected to an HD screen via the VGA output. We’re here to tell you that the damned thing doesn’t work.

We tried TVs and we tried projectors. We tried products from manufacturers great and small. Not one would accept a 1080p signal from the 360.

Naturally, we contacted the manufacturer in order to resolve the situation and properly appraise the 360’s full-HD picture quality. Beyond suggesting that we might turn the console off and on again a few times, Microsoft had no solutions.


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