This is pretty good advertising. If I was a kid and tried this, I would probably get excited seeing the "Xbox" logo pop up thinking it was actually about to play
I would love that tbh. (inserts Xbox disc into PS5) PS5: (Xbox disc in PS console startup) (stops startup) Oops, looks like this doesn’t belong here! This appears to be an Xbox disc! (ejects disc)
there's an odd feeling when it comes to seeing a unique screen designed specifically for not playing the disc on an xbox, kinda like those anti-piracy screens on old snes games - you're not supposed to ever see them, and it feels like you've just stepped into a place you don't belong, creating this incredibly scary feeling.
I remember as a kid, the red “cannot read this” absolutely terrified me. I tested like this video a few years ago and that unique error for putting a Xbox game into a ps2 gave me chills as well
That is pretty nifty what Microsoft did with original Xbox discs. Making a small portion of the disc conform to DVD-video format so they could put a video there saying "This is an Xbox disc..."
Just explaining, the first thing a hardware does when loading a storage is reading and executing his bootsector, where in this old games like PS2 and Xbox, contains the second intro clip and some hardware validations. That's why if you input a PS1 game on a PS2 console you still watch the second clip intro from the PS1. Even the console architecture is quite different, all of them uses a processor running the most common assembly commands, to boots all kind of discs available.
@@crallyrally4687 No, almost impossible. A game is compiled specific to run on a certain target (PS2, XBOX, PC). A disc from ps2 cannot be undestanded by a XBOX, only the bootsector can, which normally is a 500 kb space.
@@CaioAletroca it's just an image file Microsoft has put on the disk just in case someone were to put it into anything other than an Xbox. Anything that can read common picture formats would show the same thing, even a DVD player. You can tell by how the PS3 saw the game as a DVD because that's the only part of the disk it recognized.
You can't put your own "second clip" from a console (like PS1) to run into another console (like PS2) without that second console having specific hardware / emulation to run that first console. This Xbox message isn't encoded as something readable as PS2-game clip, or as PS3 clip, but instead simply stored as video data, to be played as a normal DVD. If PS1 had support for DVD, it would display that same message.
@@Hellraiser988 Thats what i said. All devices read dvd format, but if it's not xbox it will go to prerecorded video message, if it is xbox it will load XBE and game will load...
the worst part about this, is how the intro logo explosion is infinitely better looking on this warning, than the one i get when i actually turn on my xbox.
2:54 I know someone has already done a Japanese translation, but this is a French translation of what it says: Ceci est un jeu Xbox. Pour jouer, veuillez l'insérer dans votre console Xbox. This is a Xbox game. To play, please insert it in your Xbox console
@@akbar11 Their not the same, because every languages has different grammar structures, so all the words are placed differently in different places for it to make since in the other language. But besides that the words are placed differently, they basically do mean the same thing as the english version, again I said "meaning" all of the translations are described differently but they do MEAN the same thing
Demon Droid I forgot I commented here.Oh when I say that I meant the screen that pops up when you don't insert it into an Xbox and gives you that cool intro screen to put it into one. Perhaps I didn't structure that sentence properly.
Randomthingz2show Randomthingz2show You didnt structure it right but the screen that it claims to appear only happens when you put an xbox disc into a regular dvd player not a ps2
The clicks sound really good, so you could edit it to show the click of the case then cut to the disk popping out then opening the console etc. So you hear *Click* *Click* *Click* *Click*.
As a kid, one night I had a nightmare which I will remember forever, in this nightmare my old PC (which was in my bedroom) booted up on its own and installed and started a program which had a blue interface and it showed up something (I can't remember exactly what it was rn), and, after a while, it started a countdown of an hour before its self destruction. I still to this day don't know how it's possible for a kid (I had about 10 years if I'm not wrong) to have such a detailed nightmare about a PC...
My nightmare was that i was sleeping, then my computer booted on its own with a :) and red screen of death and then it for some reason found a gun and you know what happened
i love how instead of the ps2 being like “please put in a playstation disc” it says to put it into your xbox, implying it wants you to use the xbox. kinda sweet how they’d encourage you to use a different console
Not sure why you find it "creepy" when xbox games get recognized as DVDs by non-xbox systems or when the error message on the DVD video is written in more than English.
hmm maybe because microsoft add this video message to every xbox game to inform every moron who's gonna gonna play this on pc, dvd player or non microsoft console. Every error message has to be in english because everyone has to known english even if xbox (and xbox games to be exact) was sold in his non english country. yeah thats creepy
It's basically just a short video in standard DVD Video format. The same on every DVD Video machine on earth. Your original Xbox game intro was also greenish on the PS2. I suspect you have a problem of hue with your PS2, either a faulty cable or a settings problem.
The original Xbox for some reason to me always seemed like a bit of an enigma even though I had one it always seemed mysterious like it was capable of so much more than it led on........
For people wondering how this works: Xbox Game Discs from the Original Xbox and Xbox 360 era are split in 2 parts: 1 of them follows a special format that only an Xbox can read, and it contains the game data. The other one follows the standard DVD video format, and can be read by any DVD video player. It contains these messages. (And when I say any DVD video player, I really mean any one of them. Even if you put an Xbox 360 disc to a DVD video player from the early days of DVD video back in 1996, it will play the error message, even though the first Xbox was years from being announced back then. It's not part of the player or the console itself, it's part of the disc). When you insert the disc into the Xbox console it was designed for, it can read the game data and play your game. However, any other platform will just interpret the game data part of the disc as unreadable or empty data as it does not know how to deal with the format, and then it will find the DVD video part and think it's the only thing on the disc. This makes the platform believe there is only the DVD video part, and thus will label the disc as a DVD movie that you can watch, when really it just can't see the game and lets you watch the error message only. All this is done with software. If you manage to patch the firmware of a DVD drive to read the special Xbox format, you can theoretically get any DVD player to boot an Xbox game. Whether it will work or not is a different matter. This is also how Xbox game dumping is done with PCs. There are special drives that have a firmware called Kreon firmware that is basically just a firmware for these drives that is patched to be able to read the Xbox game data on your PC, and with that you can do whatever you want. P.S.: The Xbox 360 game data format is incompatible with the Original Xbox's, so inserting an Xbox 360 disc to an Original Xbox will have the same outcome for the same reason.
It seems Xbox games are a combined DVD video and DVD data disc containing the game. By default, it's set to boot as a DVD video so other platforms are greeted with an error message. Xbox however will check if it contains a Xbox game in the data part of the disc before loading a DVD video. Interesting technique from Microsoft.
It's something every console does. A small section of the disk has information on it for the console to use called a header (helps to fight piracy amongst other things), and most consoles will see a header not meant for them and think "oh lmao it's a DVD let's boot it up then lads"
It's something every console does. A small section of the disk has information on it for the console to use called a header (helps to fight piracy amongst other things), and most consoles will see a header not meant for them and think "oh lmao it's a DVD let's boot it up then lads" or "oh lmao it's a CD let's Bott it up then lads" based on what the discs actually got on it
8:53 the reason the colors are different is because you put a NTSC Xbox game in a European PlayStation 2 and I’m pretty sure that PAL composite outputs can’t properly show the NTSC signal. Most HDMI outputs can display other encoding system so that’s why it was normal on your PS3 and PS4
I think that Microsoft and Sony should make it a thing that if you stick a disc of the opposite console in it, the console should brick while at the same time displaying the message "You did this to yourself"
Well you know the ps1 would not even try since it can't read dvds, also for those who don't know, there is a dedicated partition on the dvd-dl for xbox 360 that is played on all standard dvd player with a similar warning.
@@jonathanupton6093 Xbox is not garbage, sure they make alot of dick moves, but Xbox is still good, unlike Windows which installs Windows 10 automaticly without asking!!! WINDOWS 10 IS A VIRUS!!!!
The Xbox disks have an VIDEO_TS folder with clip and message for DVD players. Playstations runs this disks like an DVD Video and playing message like regular DVD player.
I don't have an Xbox, and the only PlayStation I have is the PS2 and it still works like new. *The reason for all this is because I'm a Nintendo kid but I watch these playstation and Xbox test videos because I think these videos are cool and please don't judge me*