1. It'll tell you to "calm down"
There's no need to shout, even if you've got a few friends round. The new Kinect is able to "zoom" on speakers in noisy environments - it'll watch out for open mouths, and the fancy array mic can filter out surrounding chatter. Bellow at the sensor and it may politely instruct you to "calm down", as though addressing an excitable grandparent. It's vaguely humiliating.
2. You can change the colour of your achievement notifications
Not so keen on that greeny-blue default? Don't worry, it's not permanent. What's more, you'll see achievements in different colours on the same screen when you and a friend are logged in.
3. Kinect can put your facial expressions into a game
Games can now use Kinect to capture your face and body dimensions and map them onto an in-game character. In Kinect Sports Rivals, that means you get a scrubbed-up version of yourself to throw at sports challenges. In a squad shooter, it could allow you to beam your mug onto the body of the soldier in play, where it'll mimic your expression in real time.
4. It's got a Windows 8-based OS, but you can't just transfer apps from your PC
The Xbox One runs three partitions side by side - a gaming OS, a hypervisor to keep the other partitions in line, and a Windows-derived OS. This has led some (including PC manufacturer Dell) to assume that you can simply transfer over existing Windows 8 apps to the console. In practice it's not quite that simple, as the version of Windows the console runs has been re-tailored for Xbox One. Still, it should be easier to port an app over than to create one from scratch.
5. It doesn't like being stood up
The Xbox One's slot-loading disc drive isn't designed to sit vertically, so up-end the console at your own risk. Apparently, Microsoft's worked out that around 80% of Xbox 360 players use their consoles horizontally. Odds are you won't be bothered, then..
6. All Xbox One games get free access to dedicated servers
Microsoft's Xbox One cloud support now has a proper name, Xbox Live Compute, and the offerings include free dedicated multiplayer servers for all developers who wish to partake. That's in addition to remote processing power to splurge on things like background updates and latency-friendly tasks such as AI and physics routines. Microsoft doesn't expect every third party to take advantage of this, because there's no such thing as a universally appropriate server infrastructure, but we'd be surprised if smaller independents like Respawn don't cash in.
7. It's got a pretty sweet boot sequence
It won't change your life, but it's pretty slick. Here's a GIF captured from one of Microsoft's recent videos.
8. You can track people's activities while you're playing a game
Say "Xbox, snap Activity" to pin a Twitter-style feed to the side of the screen. You'll be able to see things like what somebody's just created using Upload Studio, which achievements they've unlocked and what they're watching on telly.
9. You can't use your real name on Xbox Live at launch
But you will eventually. "While real identities continue to be part of our plans for the experience on Xbox One, at launch, customers will continue to search for friends using their Gamertags," explains a comment mailed to Kotaku. "Our teams are working hard to deliver a quality experience for Xbox One. This means prioritising some features and sometimes postponing others for a later update.
10. Not all games will be 1080p, because that's not always for the best
Microsoft tried to insist on a baseline resolution when Xbox 360 hit shelves. It didn't pan out so well. "We had a Technical Certification Requirement mandate that all titles had to be 720p or better with at least 2x anti-aliasing," Xbox One engineer Andrew Goossen explained in a chat earlier this month. "And we later ended up eliminating that TCR as we found it was ultimately better to allow developers to make the resolution decision themselves. Game developers are naturally [incentivised] to make the highest quality visuals possible, and so will choose the most appropriate trade-off between quality of each pixel versus number of pixels for their games."
11. You can stream games online
You don't have to do any fancy setup for it, either. Just say "Xbox stream" and you can instantly broadcast any game oyu're playing over game streaming service Twitch.tv. Any of the millions of viewers can watch and comment, and you can do the same through Xbox Live. Game streaming is already big business: Twitch has 35 million viewers a month.
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