Category:Xbox 360 games: Difference between revisions
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| == About this page and the {{360|3.1}} game console == | == About this page and the {{360|3.1}} game console == | ||
| The {{360|4}} is a home video game console developed by Microsoft, launched in November 22, 2005. As the successor to the original Xbox, it is the second console in the Xbox series. It competed with Sony's {{ps3|4}} and Nintendo's {{wiki|Wii|icon=hide}} as part of the seventh generation of video game consoles. This is the best selling console that Microsoft ever made. | The {{360|4}} is a home video game console developed by Microsoft, launched in November 22, 2005. As the successor to the original Xbox, it is the second console in the Xbox series. It competed with Sony's {{ps3|4}} and Nintendo's {{wiki|Wii|icon=hide}} as part of the seventh generation of video game consoles. This is the best selling console that Microsoft ever made. | ||
| Most {{source|4}} engine games made after 2007 (using {{src07|4}} branch or later), have native support for the Xbox 360 game controller, using XInput, which was later disabled and replaced with Steam Input since engine update around 2020-2022, which only applies to most {{src13|1}} games, {{l4d2|1}} and later Valve games. | Most {{source|4}} engine games made after 2007 (using {{src07|4}} branch or later), have native support for the Xbox 360 game controller, using XInput, which was later disabled and replaced with Steam Input since engine update around 2020-2022, which only applies to most {{src13|1}} games, {{l4d2|1}} and later Valve games. As it's competitor, {{ps3|4}} are notorious for it's complex processor architecture, {{Src|3.1}} games on {{360|4}} runs better compared to {{ps3|3.1}}, and this may explains why Valve never ported {{l4d|3.1}} and {{l4d2|3.1}} to {{ps3|3.1}}, nor outsourcing the L4D & L4D2 port to EA (Electronic Arts) as previously the PS3 version of {{tob|3.1}} have some technical and performance issues. However, in 2010 - 2011, Valve supported both game consoles starting with {{p2|4}}. | ||
| This category page lists the following games that either have been officially released or ported to the {{360|3.1}} gaming console. For the Wikipedia article about the Xbox 360, which have more information about it's history, sales, and more, [[WP:Xbox 360|click here]]. | This category page lists the following games that either have been officially released or ported to the {{360|3.1}} gaming console. For the Wikipedia article about the Xbox 360, which have more information about it's history, sales, and more, [[WP:Xbox 360|click here]]. | ||
| == Hardware Specifications == | == Hardware Specifications == | ||
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| |minHD    = {{wiki|Xbox_360_technical_specifications#Hard_drive_storage|HDD with varied capacity (see Wikipedia)}}<br> Dual-layer DVD-ROMs 12× speed, HD-DVD (discontinued) | |minHD    = {{wiki|Xbox_360_technical_specifications#Hard_drive_storage|HDD with varied capacity (see Wikipedia)}}<br> Dual-layer DVD-ROMs 12× speed, HD-DVD (discontinued) | ||
| |minGPU   = ATI/AMD Xenos, 10 MB of eDRAM + 512MB GDDR3 (240 GFLOPS)<br>[[DirectX]] 9 | |minGPU   = ATI/AMD Xenos, 10 MB of eDRAM + 512MB GDDR3 (240 GFLOPS)<br>[[DirectX]] 9 | ||
| |minaudio = Analog stereo | |minaudio = '''A/V-Multi & 3.5mm''': Analog stereo<br>'''TOSLINK & HDMI''': LPCM stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital with WMA Pro | ||
| |minother = {{ExpandBox|'''Video outputs''': <br>'''HD (up to 1080p):''' Component video, VGA, HDMI (models after 2007) | |minother = {{ExpandBox|'''Video outputs''': <br>'''HD (up to 1080p):''' Component video, VGA, HDMI (models after 2007) | ||
| '''SD (480i/p, 576i/p):''' SCART RGB, D-Terminal, Component video, S-Video, Composite<br><br> | '''SD (480i/p, 576i/p):''' SCART RGB, D-Terminal, Component video, S-Video, Composite<br><br> | ||
| Line 31: | Line 32: | ||
| *{{Wiki|Xbox 360|Wikipedia page about the Xbox 360}} | *{{Wiki|Xbox 360|Wikipedia page about the Xbox 360}} | ||
| *{{Wiki|Xbox 360 technical specifications|Full hardware specifications}} | *{{Wiki|Xbox 360 technical specifications|Full hardware specifications}} | ||
| [[Category:Games]] | |||
| [[Category:Console Games]] | |||
| [[Category:Game Consoles]] | |||
Latest revision as of 08:14, 28 February 2025
About this page and the Xbox 360 game console
The  Xbox 360 is a home video game console developed by Microsoft, launched in November 22, 2005. As the successor to the original Xbox, it is the second console in the Xbox series. It competed with Sony's
 Xbox 360 is a home video game console developed by Microsoft, launched in November 22, 2005. As the successor to the original Xbox, it is the second console in the Xbox series. It competed with Sony's  PlayStation 3 and Nintendo's
 PlayStation 3 and Nintendo's  Wii as part of the seventh generation of video game consoles. This is the best selling console that Microsoft ever made.
 Wii as part of the seventh generation of video game consoles. This is the best selling console that Microsoft ever made.
Most  Source engine games made after 2007 (using
 Source engine games made after 2007 (using  Source 2007 branch or later), have native support for the Xbox 360 game controller, using XInput, which was later disabled and replaced with Steam Input since engine update around 2020-2022, which only applies to most Source 2013 games, Left 4 Dead 2 and later Valve games. As it's competitor,
 Source 2007 branch or later), have native support for the Xbox 360 game controller, using XInput, which was later disabled and replaced with Steam Input since engine update around 2020-2022, which only applies to most Source 2013 games, Left 4 Dead 2 and later Valve games. As it's competitor,  PlayStation 3 are notorious for it's complex processor architecture, Source games on
 PlayStation 3 are notorious for it's complex processor architecture, Source games on  Xbox 360 runs better compared to PlayStation 3, and this may explains why Valve never ported Left 4 Dead and Left 4 Dead 2 to PlayStation 3, nor outsourcing the L4D & L4D2 port to EA (Electronic Arts) as previously the PS3 version of The Orange Box have some technical and performance issues. However, in 2010 - 2011, Valve supported both game consoles starting with
 Xbox 360 runs better compared to PlayStation 3, and this may explains why Valve never ported Left 4 Dead and Left 4 Dead 2 to PlayStation 3, nor outsourcing the L4D & L4D2 port to EA (Electronic Arts) as previously the PS3 version of The Orange Box have some technical and performance issues. However, in 2010 - 2011, Valve supported both game consoles starting with  Portal 2.
 Portal 2.
This category page lists the following games that either have been officially released or ported to the Xbox 360 gaming console. For the Wikipedia article about the Xbox 360, which have more information about it's history, sales, and more, click here.
Hardware Specifications
| Xbox 360 | ||
|---|---|---|
| Hardware Specifications | ||
| Operating system (OS) | Xbox 360 system software  Note:Based off heavily modified Windows 2000. | |
| Processor (CPU) | Microsoft XCPU (Xenon) Tri-core, each two-way SMT-capable @ 3.2GHz | |
| System memory (RAM) | 512MB GDDR3  Note:Unified, shared with GPU. | |
| Storage |  HDD with varied capacity (see Wikipedia) Dual-layer DVD-ROMs 12× speed, HD-DVD (discontinued) | |
| Video card (GPU) | ATI/AMD Xenos, 10 MB of eDRAM + 512MB GDDR3 (240 GFLOPS) DirectX 9 | |
| Sound (audio device) | A/V-Multi & 3.5mm: Analog stereo TOSLINK & HDMI: LPCM stereo, Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital with WMA Pro | |
| Other | Video outputs:  HD (up to 1080p): Component video, VGA, HDMI (models after 2007) SD (480i/p, 576i/p): SCART RGB, D-Terminal, Component video, S-Video, Composite | |
External Links
Pages in category "Xbox 360 games"
The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total.




























