Microsoft has officially shut off access to the Xbox 360 Marketplace. Gamers now mourn the loss of the iconic console’s storefront — and the “hundreds” of games that are no longer accessible due to the closure, as the Video Game History Foundation posted on X.
The Xbox 360 went on sale Nov. 22, 2005 and ushered in a new generation of multiplayer gaming. The Xbox 360 Marketplace made it just shy of its 20th anniversary; the PlayStation 3 store remains the final frontier of this console generation’s online services, as Nintendo took its Wii Shop offline in 2019. (Sony Interactive Entertainment tried to close its PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita storefront, but reversed the decision after player outcry.)
“Today the Xbox 360 Marketplace shuts down for good, taking hundreds of games and DLC off the market, with no legal way to access them,” the Video Game History Foundation wrote on X. “We’re working to fix copyright law for game preservation, but for now, we figured a cake wouldn’t hurt.”
Today the Xbox 360 Marketplace shuts down for good, taking hundreds of games and DLC off the market, with no legal way to access them. We're working to fix copyright law for game preservation, but for now, we figured a cake wouldn't hurt. pic.twitter.com/nxXIbJ8kkQ
Microsoft ran huge sales on Xbox 360 Marketplace games in the leadup to the store closure — a last hurrah for buy digital Xbox 360 games. Microsoft has added a ton of games to its backward compatibility service, making many games available to play on its newer consoles, the Xbox One and Xbox Series X. But there are plenty of games that had digital-only releases that aren’t compatible with newer consoles — and that creates a big (legal) problem for accessing those games. Games that were purchased before the storefront closure will still be accessible to people who own (or, rather, who license) them.
Gamers continue to gather on social media and in forums to say goodbye to the storefront and the games that won’t live past
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