The Xbox 360 was a part of the seventh generation of video game consoles and was the console that saw Xbox really hit its stride. This generation saw the first budding releases of many franchise giants that are still major titles today. The Xbox 360 itself had many exclusive titles now rightfully considered classics by the players that can bear to acknowledge that they came out well over a decade ago.

With so many titles being released at the time, it’s understandable that some Xbox 360 games went under players' radars, or they had to hold off on purchases while waiting for another title to come out. In recent years Xbox have done a lot to make many of these classic Xbox and Xbox 360 titles backwards compatible in digital form on its newer consoles.

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Now is the perfect time then for Xbox players to look through the end of February sales, whether to pick up an old favorite for cheap or to finally get to a classic Xbox 360 game they always meant to play. The sales aren’t lacking in quality games, with titles like Splinter Cell Blacklist and Prince of Persia The Forgotten Sands both discounted by 70%.

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Fans dipping back into Cyberpunk 2077 after its recent 1.5 update may want to take a trip back through CD Projekt Red’s history and pick up the excellent but often overshadowed The Witcher 2: Assassins of Kings Enhanced Edition for only $3. The original Gears of War trilogy is also part of the sales for any fans of the newer games that want to go back and experience where the franchise started, though the games aren’t bundled together.

Classic Xbox 360 games being included in sales like this is a good thing. In an age where still serviceable Xbox 360 games only a decade old receive HD remasters and are then re-released at full price, original versions of these games can get buried in, or sometimes even removed from digital marketplaces. But at the same time, many players don’t want to pay full price for old game that would definitely be found in a bargain bin in a physical store. These cut-price sales are good for both the seller and the customer, and Xbox usually has at least one on the go, whether it’s a publisher sale or seasonal offers. A 50% discount on a classic title might just be the difference between a player buying a game they’ve always wondered about or not. Xbox gets the sale it wouldn’t have gotten otherwise, and the player gets to experience a classic game for cheap.

Digital marketplace sales also mean there is no physical side to worry about, just selling the data for the game means large sales on these older games can still happen. There is no way for a physical game store to hold a fixed price sale on games that came out 14 years ago, as only individual copies could be found at prices decided by the store.

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Source: Pure Xbox