Skip to main content

Microsoft tries to dial back trash talk on Xbox Live, but ‘get wrecked’ is fine

Microsoft released its Community Standards for Xbox, and part of the document is the company’s attempt on dialing back trash talk on Xbox Live.

Under the “Keep your content clean” section of the new community standards for Xbox Live, players are advised to “know the difference between trash talk and harassment.” Microsoft admitted that competitive multiplayer action may result in a little trash talk between players, but it laid down the law that “hate has no place” in Xbox Live, and that it is no longer acceptable when trash talk becomes harassment.

Recommended Videos

For Microsoft, acceptable trash talk includes “get wrecked,” calling out opponents for “serious potato aim” and a “cheap win,” and “get good.”

Microsoft draws the line against trash talk when it becomes “personalized, disruptive, or likely to make someone feel unwelcome or unsafe.” These include sexual threats, profanities, KYS (kill yourself), and racial slurs.

“Know and respect the other player,” Microsoft said in its community standards, a simple rule that will improve the online gaming scene but is unfortunately not followed by everyone.

The Community Standards for Xbox includes several other rules that aim to prevent unwanted behavior in the Xbox Live community, including repetitively sending messages to others without their consent, flooding voice chat with music, pretending to be a Microsoft employee or game developer, using cheating software and unauthorized hardware, and engaging in doxing.

Microsoft said that violating the community standards will lead to temporary Xbox Live account suspensions that may prohibit online multiplayer gaming, block communication, and restrict content sharing, among other things. Repeat or severe offenses, however, may result in permanent suspensions, in which the owner of the account will be forced to forfeit all licenses for games and other content, Gold membership time, and Microsoft account balances.

Microsoft is apparently cleaning up Xbox Live before the arrival of the next generation of Xbox consoles, which will reportedly be revealed at E3 2019. Collectively known as Project Scarlett, it is said that the console will come in two versions codenamed Lockhart and Anaconda. Lockhart will be the cheaper version, and will possibly be disc-less like the Xbox One S All Digital edition to maximize the xCloud game streaming service. Anaconda, meanwhile, will be the more powerful console that will go head to head with the PlayStation 5.

Aaron Mamiit
Aaron received an NES and a copy of Super Mario Bros. for Christmas when he was four years old, and he has been fascinated…
Xbox’s new transparent controller will take you back to the 2000s
A blue translucent Xbox controller in front of a cyber blue background.

I miss translucent tech products as a industrywide trend, and it seems a lot of other people do too. Case in point is the new Sky Cipher Special Edition controller Xbox announced on Wednesday.

The transparent blue Xbox Wireless Controller, which will go on sale for $70 on August 13 and is now available for preorder, can show off inner workings like, as Xbox says, the rumble pack. It also has metallic D-pad and triggers that should be more durable than plastic, rubber grips on the back, and "silver interior parts" that make it look simultaneously futuristic and nostalgic.

Read more
This is your last chance to get some heavily discounted Xbox 360 games
A chopper-esque contraption flying towards a giant monster in a city. The player character is shooting a gun at it.

Microsoft announced last year that it would be shutting down the Xbox 360 Marketplace at the end of July, but it's not over just yet. Xbox is running a massive fire sale on a number of games, with some going as low as $1.

Players won't be able to purchase any products through the storefront after it goes offline on July 29. While you can still download and play games you already own, you won't be able to watch movies or TV since the Movies & TV app will also stop working on that date. That means now is your last chance to fill up your library.

Read more
Xbox Game Pass is getting a price hike alongside complicated tier overhaul
Xbox's gamescom logo with a city at the bottom.

Microsoft just announced some price hikes and tier changes for Xbox Game Pass, its video game subscription service. The changes, which go into effect on July 10, were quietly announced on Xbox's support site before being noticed by Wario64 and Windows Central.

The most notable change is that Microsoft will no longer allow people to purchase Game Pass for Console. While existing subscriptions won't be affected, people will have to instead opt for Xbox Game Pass Core or the new Xbox Game Pass Standard tier, which is launching "in the coming months." Xbox Game Pass Standard will cost $15 a month and give subscribers access to online multiplayer on consoles, but won't support cloud gaming or have immediate access to "some games available with Xbox Game Pass Ultimate on day one."

Read more