The system is impressive, although much of what makes it so isn't strictly necessary for just gaming. Still, I find it very appealing to be able to multitask between games running under the XOS and apps running under Windows 8. (I didn't know what a
hypervisor was. I do now.) I could play for a while, then jump out and do something like watch a DVD, then resume the game where I left it off. Since I have it go on standby when I turn it off, I can resume from where I left off even the next day. This presents an interesting new problem. How do I really exit a game without forcing it by launching another game? AC Black Flag occasionally will stop playing ambient and battle music out at sea, and the only thing that will bring it back is a reboot of the game from scratch. (Quitting to the main menu and loading the save file will not fix this, or other sound bugs.) This was a problem with the 360 version too, but at least there ending the running game was easy. It's probably easy here too; I just need to discover the process. (Launching another game works in the meantime.)
Web content (IE) runs so much better than on this old PC. The only reason I'm back to the PC to type this is that I couldn't find the PS/2-USB adapter I know I have hidden away somewhere, so I could use an old spare keyboard on the Xbox. I was looking at the win and fail threads there, a painfully slow activity here because of all the embedded youtube. And youtube itself runs perfectly--so smooth. I'm so used to a stuttery mess on the PC. I usually will download the youtube videos I care about and watch them in VLC because of the crap youtube performance. I may just buy a cheap new USB keyboard somewhere, rather than hunt down an adapter for a dinosaur.
The controller is awesome. Improves on the 360's in almost every way (still getting used to the shoulder bumpers).
The D-pad is way better--completely reliable as the 360's should have been, and leaves no doubt when a direction has been pressed. The vibration of the triggers will take some getting used to. After 8 years, the rumble on the 360 became 2nd nature, and I don't even think about it. It just feels right. Here, it doesn't. Not yet. Smaller motors (in the triggers) means higher vibrating frequency, and it feels more like a buzz than a rumble. A bit weird at this early stage. There's the more traditional rumble motors in the handles too, and that feels very right.
Then there's the dual nature of the thing. It's both wired and wireless, depending on whether it's connected via USB to the console. If it is, the transmitter stops working. All data goes through the cable. Hardcore response with a wire, or casually laid back with a bit of lag. I think it uses WiFi Direct, though I'm not sure. What I do know is that it has much greater bandwidth than bluetooth, and latency is down to 9 ms (in wireless mode). I've tried it both ways, and haven't been able to tell the difference, besides shutting itself off after a few minutes of inactivity when wireless. I'm leaving it plugged in all the time now. I hope that doesn't hurt the battery pack. (Lithium-Ion--it shouldn't, right?)
The AC Black Flag version here has all the enhancements I was hoping for, and even a few I didn't know about, like the Jackdaw's deck getting awash when cutting through waves. Rain and fog look so good now. Foliage moves with you. The water and wave detail is markedly better. Sails flutter and wave in the wind. All firearms make a cloud of smoke, and sometimes gets so thick during a sea battle that you can't see what's going on. Trees have moss and other vegetation growth. Good stuff. The 30 fps is locked and consistent, and the control experience always smooth. Only the full-screen map moves herky-jerkily around, which is ridiculous. I guess no one thought this should be optimized. It's just a 2D scrolling display, so WTF? No new bugs at all, as far as I can tell. No crashes at all.
A few more days before I can try out AC Unity. That will hopefully be even more impressive than the cross-gen AC4.
I usually download things overnight, so they're typically done by the time I wake up. Even the really big games, and my connection tops out at 1MB/sec.
I do that a lot too. But I was getting only like 512KB/sec bandwidth from my 2MB/sec line. (It's supposed to be 20 mbps, or 2.5MB/sec, but it never goes past 2 for me on anything.) After giving the console a static IP address and opening all the ports to it in the router, my NAT went from strict to open. I tested the network, and now I'm getting 16 mbps (2MB/sec). I haven't had the chance to see if that's really an improvement in real-world XBL downloads, though. We'll see. Sure hope so.