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Destiny Doesn't Allow Cross-Generation Play in the Interest of Fairness

Whether you play

Much has been made about the resolution in Destiny. While the Xbox One beta won’t run in 1080p (it does on PS4), the final game is expected to hit that figure on Microsoft’s new console.

“Regardless of where the reality is, there’s definitely a perception among gamers that better hardware means you have an advantage,” Wolfson added. “We don’t want to have to enter that fray, so to create the best, most level playing field, both actually and perceptually, we separated it by platform.”

Cross-platform multiplayer hasn’t been an especially common thing in the past. 2007 first-person shooter Shadowrun is perhaps the best-known example of this, letting owners of the Xbox 360 and PC versions play against one another. That was an experiment with mixed results, though many of its problems stemmed from the differences in playing a shooter with a controller versus a keyboard and mouse.

While the graphics in the last-gen console versions of Destiny will no doubt be less pretty than what we’ve seen on PS4, Wolfson noted that many aspects of the game remain the same on all platforms. “I’ve been playing some on the Xbox 360 as well as the PS4 [at home] as we head into the beta window, and I’ve been really pleased at how I can almost forget that I’m playing on a last-gen console,” he said. “There’s really no difference at all in loading, the action game is as fluid and as action-packed, [and] there are as many combatants on the last-gen.”

The Destiny beta launched on PS4 and PS3 yesterday. The Xbox One and Xbox 360 versions will join in next Wednesday, July 23, before the beta comes to a close on July 27 at 11:59PM Pacific. The full game lands on all four platforms on September 9.

Chris Pereira is a freelance writer for GameSpot, and you can follow him on Twitter @TheSmokingManX
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