
The Original Xbox - Turning 20 years old this November
As we enter the final days of Retro|Spective we are going to be building up to looking at some classic franchises that, to be honest, it's amazing they haven't already received a dedicated thread in this series. But as part of our journey we will also be revisiting each of the biggest consoles of the 128-bit generation because they sit just on the right edge of being retro enough to warrant attention but are still recent enough to evoke strong memories and have titles that are either unique to the systems or interesting enough look back at.
In between covering the last of the franchises that will covered we will take a look back at each of the four main consoles of this era beginning with Microsoft's debut machine in the powerful and short lived original Xbox. From the birth of Xbox Live, the true beginning of the modern online gaming networks, to the rapid evolution away from the infamous Duke controller into the S controller that would become the first significant stride towards todays lauded design phase, the technological progression of the Xbox brand and its infamous black and green hues began here.
Each day, till either interest or available games dries up, we will look at a different title that is a noteworthy game in the systems history or library and discuss what that game means to us, if it was and still is a worthy title and its place within the systems history.
And now, it's time to begin...

Amped / Amped 2
These games, along with a third game on the X360, birthed one of Microsoft's first franchises in a series of snowboarding games that saw players focusing on tricks rather than racing. The games main unique feature was how it used the systems internal hard drive to load the entire mountain model so that players could free roam their way as they saw fit rather than streaming a set course. It also used the hard drive to allow players to play their own custom soundtracks, a feature that was unique to the Xbox and has sadly vanished from modern systems that technically remain capable of the feature.

Did the snowboarding series leave you feeling amped?
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