Recently, Windows Central reported that Xbox may be considering a "disc-to-digital" entitlement programme codenamed Positron, which would somehow convert physical Xbox game discs into a digital license that would allow you to download the game on Xbox consoles, most notably the upcoming Project Helix. As a PC/Xbox hybrid, Project Helix wouldn't necessarily include a disc drive, so supporting an external drive or having this sort of a disc-to-digital conversion process would be necessary to enable backwards compatibility with physical Xbox games. However, looking back at how this idea was handled with past Xbox consoles, it's clear that both technical challenges and user pushback are inevitable.
For a disc-to-digital system to work without creating duplicate copies, every disc would likely need a unique identifier that could be permanently linked to a user's account. It's rumoured that such a system was in place for the Xbox One in 2013, though it was never publicly implemented. It's possible that Microsoft could revive those plans with Project Helix, though in the absence of evidence this still feels like an extraordinary claim.
However, even with a theoretical unique disc identifier in place, there's no simple way to deactivate a physical disc once it has been converted - so would users need to physically surrender their games by mailing them in to Microsoft? Or would the company accept that physical copies could remain usable on Xbox consoles not running the latest firmware and/or not connected to the internet?
How should Project Helix support physical game discs? (2 votes)
- Via a built-in disc drive 0%
- Via external disc drives
- Via a disc-to-digital entitlement programme
Given these challenges, supporting third-party USB disc drives (tricky if they can't support Microsoft's security profiles) or producing a branded, seamless first-party option could be a better route forward. This approach is one that Sony has adopted with the PS5 generation, but Microsoft might find it difficult to offer an external drive at the same price as the Sony offering, given that Sony has produced millions of devices with disc drives outside of games consoles.
Regardless of the technical feasibility of disc-to-digital transfers or external disc drives, Microsoft is no doubt aware of the pushback against the digital transition. "Allow disc-based games with Project Helix" is one of the top requests on the new Xbox Player Voice portal, which was made specifically in response to the Positron rumour. Game collectors and those without stable internet connections rely on physical media more than the average gamer, and neither should be abandoned by future Xbox consoles.
What do you make of the whole concept - would you be eager to trade in your existing physical games for digital copies? Or does Project Helix need to come with a disc drive, or at least the option to connect one via USB? Let us know in the comments below and the poll above.