Xbox Live Vision Camera for Xbox 360

By David Carnoy, CNET.com on 03/10/2006

More Microsoft reviews , RRP: AU$59.95

The good:

  • Slick design
  • Relatively inexpensive
  • Doubles as a Web cam for PC or Mac
  • Allows online video-chat with other Xbox Live gamers
  • Takes still images to add to text messages and gamertag pictures
  • Some upcoming games will allow face mapping of in-game players
  • In music mode you can play with the visualisation with hand gestures

The bad:

  • Image quality for still photos is pretty mediocre
  • Only a handful of games are currently Vision-enabled
  • You currently have to be playing a game to video chat*

The bottomline:

As Microsoft's answer to Sony's EyeToy camera, the affordable Xbox Live Vision Camera for Xbox 360 may not yet be a must-have accessory, but we suspect that as Microsoft upgrades Xbox Live to include more Vision features, it will be.

Editors' rating:

7/10

Users' rating:

8.3/10

Ever since the Xbox 360 launched in March this year, there were plenty of not-so-secret rumours about a Web-cam-style video camera for the system that would allow Xbox Live users to video chat in real-time with one another. This same camera would also be Microsoft's answer to Sony's innovative EyeToy camera, which goes with a number of gesture-based games that have come out for the PlayStation 2, with more undoubtedly planned for the upcoming PlayStation 3.

The Xbox Live Vision camera for Xbox 360 has finally arrived, and it currently comes in two bundles. The entry-level version retails for a modest AU$59.95 and includes an Xbox 360 headset, plus two free download codes for Xbox Live Arcade games UNO and the first gesture-based Xbox game, TotemBall. The more expensive Xbox Live Vision Gold Pack adds a year-long Xbox Live Gold subscription (which enables online gameplay with other 360 users), 200 Microsoft Points that can be spent on Xbox Live Marketplace content, and a third Xbox Live Arcade game, Robotron 2084.

From a design standpoint, the Xbox Live Vision camera is a pretty nice piece of gear. It matches the Xbox 360's colouring, it tilts and swivels nicely, and it's meant to be propped up on top of your TV or any flat surface. The early review sample we received didn't have any way to adhere the camera to a surface, but chances are you'll end up wanting to move it around anyway, depending on whether you're sitting or standing.

Setting up the camera was easy. You must have a subscription to Xbox Live Gold, and your Xbox Live system software must be updated to the latest version. Ideally, you plug the camera into the USB port on the back of your Xbox 360, but if you already have a USB wireless adaptor connected to that port, you'll have to go for one of the two front USB inputs. If you have only wireless controllers and you think it's ugly to have a cable sticking out of the front of your Xbox 360, we feel your pain, having pointed out this design flaw in our review of the Xbox 360.

Once the camera is plugged into a USB port, you're good to go, and if you look closely, you'll notice that image on the camera is projected onto the background of the Xbox Live menu system, creating a cool shimmering water effect. To see yourself and adjust the picture settings, you select Xbox Live Vision from within Xbox Live menu system. You'll find options for fluorescent lighting and dark vs light back walls. Tweaking the settings will indeed impact the picture, but we found that it was easier just to leave the camera on the Automatic lighting adjustment setting, which yielded perfectly acceptable results.

You can video chat in real time while playing Xbox Live Arcade games such as UNO, Bankshot Billiards 2, Hardwood Hearts, Hardwood Spades, and Hardwood Backgammon; several other titles will become Vision-enabled in the future. Microsoft has also said that you'll be able to take a picture of yourself and map your face to your avatar in make-a-player modes in certain sports games and card games such as Activison's World Series of Poker. Until those games arrive, you can change your gamer photo using the camera. You have the choice between two gamer photos -- one that's displayed to your private buddy list and one that's seen by everyone else -- your public persona, if you will. Once you take a picture -- there's no optical zoom function, but you can digitally zoom in on yourself -- you can choose between several effects to alter or enhance your image. That's fairly cool. What's more of trip is to go into music mode and play around with the visualisation with hand gestures. We dug that.

As for video quality, it's what you'd expect from an entry-level video camera with 640x480 resolution (1.3-megapixel still-image capture). When we were video-chatting during a Hardwood Backgammon game, the picture was a little grainy but the video was mostly smooth (30fps), though you'll hit some moments of choppiness, depending on the quality of your Web connection. Still-image capture was a bit disappointing -- it's on a par with the pictures a basic mobile phone camera produces -- but we've yet to try the map-your-face feature in a game, so we'll reserve final judgement until we do.

There really isn't too much else to say, at this point anyway. At the top of our current wish list is the hope that Microsoft will add the ability to directly video-chat with your friends and family without having to play a game*. We'd also like to see a few more gesture-based games available in the future. But for the money, considering it costs the same as a wired controller and can double as a Web cam on your PC or Mac -- you're required to download a small software app in Windows -- the Xbox Live Vision camera is decent value. While it may not yet be a must-have Xbox 360 accessory, we suspect that as Microsoft upgrades Xbox Live to include more Vision features, it will be.

Editor's note: It's unclear how Microsoft will go about policing any lewd activity that might occur when users are video-chatting, but we did get the following statement from the company's PR team: "We'd like to remind parents who have young children to enable Family Friendly settings for their kids' Xbox Live account, and to configure the settings to the communication level with which they are most comfortable."

* A Microsoft Xbox spokesman has told CNET.com.au that the Xbox Live Vision Camera does function even when you're not playing a game, saying that users "can access the video chat function from within the dashboard at any time". We're currently looking into this -- check back soon for more details.

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blah
21/08/2007, 04:36 PM

rating
5
/10

It's a USB camera... won't my $2 one from taiwan do the same job?

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Boonie
28/10/2006, 12:55 AM

rating
9
/10

Looks Good

I'm looking forward to games like Rainbow Six Vegas that will allow you to use the camera to map your face for your online gaming character.

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27/10/2006, 06:32 AM

rating
9
/10

this is fantastic!:)

Pros: video chat, really inexpensive

Cons: if the usb port is already taken, it'll look ugly @ the front with it sticking out:(

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...
16/10/2006, 09:48 AM

rating
10
/10

This things GREAT

yyyyyyy

Pros: I love this camera it is soooooooooo good for all those ppl reading it it is a definite buy and if u are showing your parents this so u can get it well parents this camera is awsome!!!

Cons: noting

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