With the Alexa Xbox One skill, you can use your Amazon Echo to turn on your console, send messages and adjust your televisions’ volume without picking up your Xbox One controller.
The post Help: How to Use the Alexa Xbox One Skill to Control Your Console appeared first on The en.
Back again to answer your questions is Ask The en. If you’re interested in video games coming exclusively to Xbox One in 2019, selling your old console, or whether you should be emotionally invested in virtual reality headsets, this is the column for you.
All too often, fans of TV shows, movies, and video games fill the internet with broad declarations they have no intention of seeing through. I said I was going to buy a PlayStation 4 to play Marvel’s Spider-Man over the summer. And that’s exactly what I did.
Another month, another edition of Ask The en. I’ve got answers to all the questions you sent me this past month. That includes a guide to cleaning your Xbox One controller and the answer to a question I get a lot: why don’t I have Xbox Game Pass?
When rumors of something as seemingly as landscaping altering and exciting as an Xbox cloud console and companion service arrive in your newsreader, there’s a cycle that starts.
This time around, I’ve got answers for questions concerning my Xbox controller of choice, the Xbox Media Remote and Forza Horizon 4.
These are the games I'm planning to buy over the next calendar year.
From Xbox Controller grip repairs to music services that aren’t all that great, this edition of Ask The en covers a lot.
Every year, game makers and publishers stuff specific trends into their games. This year, we have two of these themes: Alexa as your personal gaming assistant and games completely divorced from what anyone would consider a robust single-player experience. Alexa in everything doesn’t bother me. A potential drop in single-player games released each year absolutely does.