Gaming's most hated technology failures
Hardware problems, games crashing, systems on fire - we catalog gaming's biggest eff-ups
As part of the gloriously negative Week of Hate, we thought it time to remember some of the biggest, most hated instances of our expensive hobby and lifestyle going tits up.
Xbox fire hazard
The problem: 14 million power cords for the original Xbox are recalleddue to an internal malfunction that caused the unit to emit smoke or even catch fire. Some people reported burns and minor property damage, and an Illinois family said an Xbox-caused fire was responsible for the death of their infant son.
The response: Microsoft initiated a cord replacement program that was supposed to make its console stop behaving like a fireball, though reportscontinued pouring inthat the power cord wasn’t even the real problem. As for that family, Microsoft said it wasn’t responsiblefor the system going up in smoke (even though the incident happened before the recall), and soughtfinancial compensationfor their legal defense costs.
We hated it because: Our Xboxes had been sitting there for four years not erupting, and then in 2005 we lived in fear of plugging it in and catching a face full of sparks. Ironically, people would forget this issue even exists, as the troubled 360 launch was just a few months away.
Red Ring of Death
The problem: Microsoft’s next console, the Xbox 360, soars to a 23.7% failure rate, usually indicated by the dreaded Red Ring of Death. Alater pollof 5,000 Game Informer readers suggested the failure rate could be as high as 54.2%. In 2008, California consumers launched aclass action lawsuitagainst Microsoft for all the broken hardware.
The response: Microsofttuckeda BILLION dollars away just to deal with the RROD and stepped up its console replacement program, though its prompt reaction led many to believe the company was well aware of the problem beforehandand still sold its machine to remain competitive. Later 360 units (i.e. Elites) shipped with new bits that alleviated the rampant malfunctions.
We hated it because: The problem has lessened in the past year, but in the 2007-2009 heyday every single GamesRadar editor had to send their 360 in for repair. Mr Elston even went through five 360s in the span of 15 months. That’s “total bullshit,” though Microsoft’s replacement setup was easy, free and fast. So at least it covered its tracks, right?
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DS Lites crack in half
The problem: Multiple DS Lite owners report their flip-top machine has a cracked hinge, which in many cases led to the unit’s top half flopping arounduselessly, or literally breaking in half.
The response: Nintendoformally said“less than 0.02 percent” of DS Lites suffered from the defect yet still offered free repairs to anyone who asked. Hm. Pretty good response, actually.
We hated it because: We love our DSes, and watching that tiny crack slowly grow until it snaps the whole thing half was like watching one of our kids wither away into nothingness.
A fomer Executive Editor at GamesRadar, Brett also contributed content to many other Future gaming publications including Nintendo Power, PC Gamer and Official Xbox Magazine. Brett has worked at Capcom in several senior roles, is an experienced podcaster, and now works as a Senior Manager of Content Communications at PlayStation SIE.
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