Microsoft wowed E3 2017 with Xbox One X, but it's more a curiosity than a must-buy. For now.

Coming out of E3 2017, Xbox needed a home run. Microsoft has been outsold almost 2:1 by PlayStation, and the public controversies and collapse of big-name titles during this generation – including the broken state of Halo: Master Chief Collection, the removal of splitscreen from Halo 5, and the outright cancellation of Fable Legends and Scalebound – have left Xbox languishing. So did the company hit it out of the park at E3 2017?

Not quite, though it came very close; arguably closer than they have in years. Let's start with what many were looking forward to: the full reveal of Project Scorpio.

Xbox One X… box

Why is naming consoles suddenly so difficult for the games industry? Look, I get it. Microsoft needed to keep the ‘Xbox One’ bit so people wouldn't think this was a whole new generation of console. But follow Nintendo's lead and call it the ‘New Xbox One’ or even better, ape Sony and go for ‘Xbox One Pro’.

After all, PS4 Pro may not be the most imaginative name out there, but at least you have an idea of what it is. Xbox One X doesn't mean anything. Putting that aside, it sounds too similar to Xbox One S! Can you imagine placing an order or asking about these at your local game store? "Yes, I was wondering if you have any Xbox One Xs in stock?"

Seriously. Stop and read that out loud. It's clumsy, it's too close in sound to an existing product, and it says nothing about the console itself. It's a bad name, Brent. Though admittedly, I do like the fact that, since I tend to abbreviate Xbox One as XBO, now it'll be XBO X. Har har.

This is not how you show off 4K

Following up its reveal of Scorpio's proper name, Xbox debuted Forza Motorsport 7 - which looked great! Amazing, even! I particularly loved the way windshield wipers and netting billowed in the wind. But saying a Forza game looks good is like saying Antarctica is cold. That is to say, the obvious reaction from everyone is going to be, "Well duh."

And following up Forza was… Minecraft: Angry Men With Guns Edition. Okay, so it's actually called Deep Rock Galactic, but procedurally-generated caves and blocky graphics are not the games to show off your dazzling processor power. The game could be quite fun, but that's only half the equation here. If this were any other year for Xbox, this would've been a fine game to show. It is not the game people are going to buy your expensive new box for.

Game after game followed this unfortunate model. They all looked fine, but ‘fine’ is not what Xbox needed. Don't get me wrong, The Last Night looks slick as hell and I loved what I played of The Artful Escape at PAX, so I'm not dissing on these games. But again, they're not graphical powerhouses. They're not the "oh wow, I need a new system so I can play these at even higher definition" types of games.

Assassin's Creed Origins came close, but with so many leaks ahead of time it was hard to feel like we were being shown something really new. Metro also looked fabulous, but again, established series. Nothing was the surprise we needed, and for a while, it seemed like we would never see what Xbox One X was really capable of other than a pretty racing game - which was part of a series that is already known for being ridiculously pretty! It was frustrating.

Crackdown gives hope

A new Crackdown has been on Xbox fans' wishlists for years. And while Crackdown 3 was confirmed way back in 2014, word had been relatively quiet ever since. Some thought that, along with Fable Legends and Scalebound, it had gotten the axe. And then up popped Terry Crews with his trademark wild-eyed stare and "woo!!"-worthy screams.

It was a little cheesy, sure. But this was the closest Xbox could came to a Last Guardian-style moment of resurrecting a game that was once little more than a pipe dream. At this point, most of the audience for Xbox are brand loyalists; the promise of Crackdown 3 feels like a thank you for that loyalty.

And this was the moment the Xbox conference started to turn itself around. Cuphead, which was in danger of becoming vaporware, was given a release date. Path of Exile was spotted in an indie game montage. Ori and the Blind Forest was getting a sequel. Xbox started showing us titles that gamers knew and cared about. All we needed was that flash, that sizzle, to whet our appetites.

An Anthem for Xbox players

I said in our "10 Questions E3 2017 Needs To Answer" article that Xbox needed to re-establish itself as the place to play games. Without a single moment of its 90-minute broadcast dedicated to TV apps or live sports or Skype calls, I think it's fair to say Microsoft squeezed in as much software as it could. There were artful indies, big-name franchises, and even some rising stars brought to the stage.

So now we come back to that question, with an addendum: is Xbox One X the system on which to play games? Did Microsoft sell us on its super-powered console? If the Microsoft press conference had ended one game earlier, I'd say no, definitely not. But that's not how Microsoft ended its day; it ended it with Anthem, and hot damn does that game look good.

We still know very little about exactly how Anthem plays, but everything about it was what Xbox needed: a new IP with gorgeous visuals, enhanced by the power of Xbox One X. Sure, you could play Anthem on a regular old Xbox, but here was a game that finally begged the question, "but why would you if you can have it better?"

This wasn't an established series known for its beauty. This was something new, and we could let our minds run wild with possibilities, because nobody knew what to expect. We could daydream without limit about lush forests, spectacular vistas, daunting creatures, all rendered in crystal clear resolution. Anthem made us perk up our ears and got us interested.

As for me, was it enough to sell me on a new $500 box? No. (Wait, seriously? $500?! *sigh*) But! At least now you have my attention, Xbox. That's not where I wanted to be after your conference, but it's a fine place to start.

Sam Prell

Sam is a former News Editor here at GamesRadar. His expert words have appeared on many of the web's well-known gaming sites, including Joystiq, Penny Arcade, Destructoid, and G4 Media, among others. Sam has a serious soft spot for MOBAs, MMOs, and emo music. Forever a farm boy, forever a '90s kid.

Latest in Xbox
Minecraft Diamond Armor
Minecraft Pocket Edition got its name because one of its devs was a big "Nintendo nerd" who wanted to pay homage to the Game Boy Pocket
Monster Hunter Wilds trailer screenshot showing a young woman with long blonde hair tied back into a ponytail smiling slightly, pumping her left fist in the air
Monster Hunter Wilds' infamously confusing menus spare no player, not even Gemma's voice actor herself: "This is honestly what I’m struggling with the most"
Fortnite Outlaw Keycard
Fortnite Outlaw Keycard: How to unlock it and what does it do
ben starr dressed in harlequin makeup chomping down on a banana
Balatro creator says it's "useless" for him to give advice to other devs because "I only have one data point" and it was a 5 million-sale success story
Monster Hunter Wilds
Monster Hunter Wilds players are tricking the action RPG into thinking they completed hunt quests in mere seconds using the power of poison ammo
Baldur's Gate 3 screenshot showing Astarion, a pale male elf with short curly white hair and red eyes, looking over his shoulder with a smirk on his face
Baldur's Gate 3 Astarion actor comes face to face with what might just be the best merch to come of the RPG yet – a 5-foot Funko Pop figure of his character
Latest in Features
The Witcher 3 screenshot of Geralt
Avowed and Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 tap into the same thing that makes The Witcher 3 so compelling – and it's something I'm always looking for in RPGs
Marvel Rivals Spider-Man
Spider-Man has become every Marvel Rivals player's worst nightmare
The Punisher holding two machine guns in the rain
Daredevil: Born Again - Learn the bullet-riddled comic book history of the Punisher before he officially joins the MCU
A woman in a underwater machine waving during the cinematic teaser for Subnautica 2.
Subnautica 2: Everything we know about the new underwater survival game
Daredevil: Born Again
Who killed [SPOILER] in Daredevil: Born Again episode 3?
The AMD Ryzen 7 8700G being held above a motherboard by a reviewer
AMD's pro-consumer 9070 strategies are exactly why it's primed to dominate the CPU market in 2025