"Everyone here who wants a 360 will be able to leave with a 360."
In these new console-starved times, when pre-orders are hard to come by, it's hard to imagine anyone uttering such an outlandish statement. But that's exactly what a Best Buy rep said 15 years ago, on Nov. 22, 2005, as Microsoft launched the Xbox 360 at a blockbuster "Zero Hour" event in the Mojave Desert.
"Our goal with the launch event is to reward the gamer by creating the ultimate Xbox 360 oasis," former Xbox exec Peter Moore said at the time. "Gamers at 'Zero Hour' will have bragging rights to say 'I spent over 24 hours at the epicenter of the gaming universe, and I was among the first generation of the next generation of gaming."
Microsoft staged the Zero Hour event in an enormous hangar, clearing out the space to make way for an event stage and a small army of gaming stations surrounded by beanbag chairs. The whole scene was further accentuated by the color green, a hallmark of the Xbox brand. Even the building exterior featured green lighting.
IGN's 2005 reporting on Zero Hour described the event as a space-age setting of techno music and white domes reminiscent of Spaceball City. The domes housed important information about key Xbox services and features, as well as... alcohol. The booze probably played a role in the subsequent beanbag chair fight that broke out in front of the hangar.
"While we were asking questions a cacophony of screams and yells started up behind us. We turned around to find that the crowd of people that had been sitting silently in front of the hangar door had suddenly transformed into a pack of raging beasts intent on destroying all that was free and shaped like a mushroom," IGN's report reads. "Yes, pre-launch excitement had culminated in a wild bean bag chair tossing fiasco, which was actually pretty funny."
The multi-day event was a little bit press event, a little bit fan convention. Launch parties like this aren't unusual when new consoles launch, but this one stands out for its location and unusual environment. The Mojave Desert isn't exactly a major media market, but the hangar event space offers an impressive visual.
Gizmodo's 2005 coverage described the whole thing in hilarious terms: Burning Man as interpreted by Microsoft marketeers. That description is entirely earned, as one Microsoft employee told the site that the resemblance is purposeful. The same report also notes an interesting bit of trivia: The hangar was used in the shooting of a Mission: Impossible movie. Twist!
Tweet may have been deleted
Events like this used to be much more common in the gaming world. I wasn't at Zero Hour, but could tell all sorts of stories. About the Call of Duty review event held at a Palm Springs resort that felt like a scene out of The Prisoner. Or separate Florida events hosted by Capcom and Midway (R.I.P.) that were basically just an excuse to ply the media with booze in Miami. None of these events can make a bad game good, but that didn't stop the corporate powers-that-be from trying!
Those kinds of events are thankfully more a relic than a normal occurrence these days, even when there's not a raging pandemic keeping people locked in their homes. But these big, expensive, and totally overblown gatherings definitely brought some great photo opps.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
15 years ago, the Xbox 360 launched in the desert. What a wild event.-违心之论网
sitemap
文章
28522
浏览
2
获赞
46
Imgur was hacked in a 2014 data breach
Good Guy Greg, Scumbag Steve, and their fellow meme friends had better shore up their online securitApple is reportedly dropping the 'hey' from 'hey Siri'
It seems Apple is firmly team "hay is for horses" because it's pulling the "hey" from Siri's wake-upiOS 16's lock screen is terrible for iPhone notifications
Before iOS 16, my iPhone'slock screen was like a flawless, beautiful sandcastle. It had a backgroundBrazil suspends iPhone sales until Apple includes a charger in the box
The Brazilian government has had enough of Apple’s shenanigans.A Tuesday press releaseby the cPhoenix Suns' Eric Bledsoe inspires hair salon meme after bitter tweet
When Phoenix Suns' point guard Eric Bledsoe got in trouble over a tweet, he tried to use a trip to tGreat white shark leaps into tiny boat, fisherman treats it like NBD
Welp, I'm never fishing again. Terry Selwood was hoping to catch some snapper off the coast of EvansBest iPad deal: Save $100 on the Apple iPad Mini in every configuration
SAVE $100: As of September 7, you can snag the newest Apple iPad mini in any configuration (64GB, 25Sophia the robot taught a STEM class to the generation that's ready to embrace AI
It was a typical online class in the Covid era. Emoji, ranging from heart-eyes to clapping hands, flApple now sells a SIM
Good news for people who hate carrier contracts and have a thousand bucks to spend on a phone: AppleScientists kept mouse sperm in space for 9 months—then tried making babies
Mice sperm can survive the radiation exposure of space, according to a new study, something that couHow Google is helping scammers via Google Sites
It seems everyone uses Google's free services. Its search engine is the most-trafficked website in tDonald Trump talked about space and Buzz Aldrin's face says it all
Donald Trump's bizarre ceremony to bring back the National Space Council had a lot of people wonderiThis Airbnb is made entirely out of LEGO and you can spend the night
Turns out all that time spent playing with LEGO was time well spent. SEE ALSO: ThSpaceX just stuck another rocket landing at sea, this time before dawn
Hey there, SpaceX: We get it. You're good at this. The Elon Musk-founded spaceflight company launcheRevisiting the Radeon R9 280X / HD 7970
Continuing along with revisiting some of our favorite old graphics cards, today we'll be checking ba