Backward-compatibility updated
EA’s Black and LucasArts’ Star Wars: Battlefront II are now both available to gamers on the Xbox 360, provided that the interested player has a hard drive and connectivity to Xbox Live to download the update.
Critized before due to the few playable games that work well, Xbox 360’s backwardscompatibility with Xbox games has today added a new repertoire of games to the list of supported titles. Frontlining the said “recruits” are LucasArts’ Star Wars: Battlefront II, a game that features an all-new single-player experience that takes players through an epic, story-based saga set in the Star Wars Galaxy; and EA’s Black, a version of Electronic Arts’ machine-gun shooter.
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Half-Life 2, Fable, Fable: The Lost Chapters, Forza Motorsport, Ninja Gaiden, Ninja Gaiden Black and Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Chaos Theory are among the other big titles that are expected to have also benefited from improved performance.
EA’s Black and LucasArts’ Star Wars: Battlefront II are now both available to gamers on the Xbox 360, provided that the interested player has a hard drive and connectivity to Xbox Live to download the update.
Critized before due to the few playable games that work well, Xbox 360’s backwardscompatibility with Xbox games has today added a new repertoire of games to the list of supported titles. Frontlining the said “recruits” are LucasArts’ Star Wars: Battlefront II, a game that features an all-new single-player experience that takes players through an epic, story-based saga set in the Star Wars Galaxy; and EA’s Black, a version of Electronic Arts’ machine-gun shooter.
Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Half-Life 2, Fable, Fable: The Lost Chapters, Forza Motorsport, Ninja Gaiden, Ninja Gaiden Black and Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Chaos Theory are among the other big titles that are expected to have also benefited from improved performance.