Share this article

Latest news

With KB5043178 to Release Preview Channel, Microsoft advises Windows 11 users to plug in when the battery is low

Copilot in Outlook will generate personalized themes for you to customize the app

Microsoft will raise the price of its 365 Suite to include AI capabilities

Death Stranding Director’s Cut is now Xbox X|S at a huge discount

Outlook will let users create custom account icons so they can tell their accounts apart easier

New Microsoft patent may allow users to convert Xbox game discs to digital versions

2 min. read

Published onMay 11, 2022

published onMay 11, 2022

Share this article

Read our disclosure page to find out how can you help Windows Report sustain the editorial teamRead more

Microsoft has created a new patent that demonstrates a method forvalidating physical Xbox game discs to digital game entitlements. This disc-to-digital patent seems to have been created recently, though the concept is not a new one: as far back as 2018 (two years before the Series X|S was released)it was reported that such as disc-to-digital scheme would be implementedfor the digital-only iteration of the next-gen Xbox.

Digital distribution of games is becoming more and more common, with both Sony and Microsoft releasing digital-only versions of their next-gen hardware. And even in the case of some physical releases (Halo Infinite being one well-known example), a digital download is required to fully install and play the game.

(Gamerant) Microsoft Patent Could Verify Physical Games for Xbox Digital Libraryhttps://t.co/vMB2E9Y2Eqpic.twitter.com/NzhZM23R0i

— Idle Sloth???????? (@IdleSloth84)May 10, 2022

How exactly the disc-to-digital conversion would work remains unclear, but it seems that the process would begin with users uploading a physical game’s licensing details to a server network to gain access to a digital version of the game. The patent information doesn’t seem to address whether the game disc would be usable from there, though it would be likely that if so, users would be required to check in from time to time.

No doubt this would be a very exciting feature for Xbox Series S users and those who haven’t made the next-gen leap from Xbox One as of yet. Though many patent ideas don’t see the light of day, it seems highly likely that Microsoft would want to implement such a feature. Love it or hate it, it appears that the future is digital when it come to gaming.

Robert Collins

User forum

0 messages

Sort by:LatestOldestMost Votes

Comment*

Name*

Email*

Commenting as.Not you?

Save information for future comments

Comment

Δ

Robert Collins