- cross-posted to:
- gaming@kbin.social
- games@lemmy.world
- xbox@lemmy.ca
- cross-posted to:
- gaming@kbin.social
- games@lemmy.world
- xbox@lemmy.ca
For a good while, there was a bit of hype built around the Xbox Series S, in particular for the retro gaming scene. It was a cheaper device that offered a small form factor. Likewise, it allowed consumers to download emulators and enjoy various retro video games. But while this process was available, some consumers were skeptical. Of course, it didn’t take Microsoft too long before they outright banned emulators from being available in the marketplace, making it impossible to download and enjoy. That’s just the emulators being used in the Xbox Series X/S retail mode.
[…]
RETAIL MODE ON XBOX IS DEAD!
- 15-day suspensions handed out to users of retail emulators as a warning shot from Microsoft.
- Devs warning users to delete emulators
- Retail Mode team disbanding and shutting down the Patreon. Sorry to bear the bad news. RT to warn others
[Article continues…]
Is there a reason you’d want to use retail mode for emulators over developer mode? I don’t know what the two modes offer.
The ease of not having to boot into dev mode and rebooting into retail mode if you want to play with friends.
You also don’t need to pay the dev fee iirc.
Booting out of dev mode will also remove your apps if you don’t explicitly tell it not too. Which in turn is a hassle (there is an app that can be used to bypass this question tho).
You have to pay a 20$ fee do get access to dev mode and reboot the console to switch between the two. So it’s mostly just the convenience factor of having your emulators in the same menus as your regular games