Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit



Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit
Price: $0.01

  • XBOX DVD Movie Playback Kit Module DVD Video

Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit
Product Description
XBOX DVD Movie Playback Kit Module DVD VideoAmazon.com Review
Got an Xbox? Do you enjoy watching DVDs? Then you need one of these. This DVD playback kit unlocks the DVD functionality of Microsoft's powerful Xbox and helps make the console an even more important addition to your home entertainment deck.

Feeling rather light in hand, this remote features large keys that feel rubbery yet firm. The kit sports some of the basic functions you'd expect from a common controller, including chapter skip, play, pause, and number buttons. There's also handy 32x fast-forward and reverse controls.

Pressing the display button calls up a friendly onscreen menu that allows access to more features, including up to 10x magnification, A-B playback loop (for cueing and viewing favorite scenes repeatedly), and subtitle and audio options. It's worth noting that many lower-cost DVD remotes have access to such features through the press of a button. The fact that this one requires you to use a menu to access such common commands may rankle DVD aficionados, as the menu is a bit slower than using buttons. Still, the menu is quite intuitive and couldn't be much easier to use.

For the remote to work, you'll need to plug the included infrared receiver into an open controller port on the Xbox. Most gamers will never need to unplug the receiver again, as you can plug it into the rarely used fourth port. Interestingly, the receiver works best when the remote is operated almost directly in front of it, and can be a little finicky when signals are sent from the far left or right.

The couch potato crowd won't be thrilled to learn that the remote does not include power or eject buttons. Why such standard features were omitted escapes us, but that is far and away the worst thing we can say about an otherwise decent control. --Mark Brooks

Pros:

  • Though very lightweight, the controller seems sturdily made and the buttons are large and comfy
  • Uses any of the 4 Xbox game controller ports; rarely gets in the way
  • Gives the Xbox cool DVD playback features
  • Onscreen menu is very easy to use

Cons:

  • No power or eject buttons
  • A-B looping, subtitles, and language selects--as well as other features--are only accessible via onscreen menus
  • Cannot use the remote from far to the left or right of the sensor

Amazon.com Product Description
Enables DVD movie playback functionality on the Xbox video game system. Includes a DVD remote control and an infrared receiver that plugs into an Xbox controller port. Note: this item is required for DVD movie playback on Xbox.
Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit

3pc Accessory Black Silicone Case+Thumb Joystick Replacment for Xbox Controller
US $4.08
End Date: Thursday May-24-2012 12:55:28 PDT
Buy It Now for only: US $4.08
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Xbox DVD Movie Playback Kit

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{ 5 comments… read them below or add one }

Russ Painter April 23, 2010 at 7:44 pm

1) Get this Movie Playback Kit

2) Put the remote away in a drawer (you still need the receiver)

3) Enter the code for an RCA DVD Player into your universal remote

4) Use your universal remote to control your XBox without any custom programming!
My Score: 5 / 5 stars

Jeff April 23, 2010 at 9:45 pm

Pros: Inexpensive & has features that high priced DVD players don’t come with.
Cons: Hard to find one.
Overall: Great for Xbox gamers who want a High Quality DVD player for under [item price].

My info:

I bought my Xbox in the beginning of January right after I returned my GameCube console. I purchased the Xbox DVD kit about 2 months after from Amazon.com for [item price]. I already have a DVD player but I wanted this anyway. An actually it plays DVDs better then my regular DVD player. The remote is great in my opinion; it’s comfortable, convenient, & filled with features.

What comes in the Kit?

The kit comes with the Xbox DVD Remote. The remote has the basic buttons; play, fast forward, rewind, play, stop, pause, up, down, left, right, select, 0-9, & menu. The remote also comes with some extras like 2x 4x, 6x, 8x, 16x, &32x Fast Forward and Rewind. It has a nice Zoom feature ranging from 2x, 4x, 6x, 8x, & 10x. A – B feature is also nice to have for repetitions of a scene, click A – B once for the beginning of the scene to repeat and push it one more time to end the scene, it will keep repeating until you press A – B again. 2 AAA batteries are required to be purchased separately. The range of the Remote is around 20 to 25ft.

The Receiver also is required to play DVDs. The receiver is a small maybe 2 by 2 inches black square. Where does it go? It plugs into any controller port. What does it do? The Receiver activates the DVD compatibility. How does it work? Plug the Receiver into a slot while the Xbox console is turned off. Insert a DVD into the drive and the movie will automatically boot up like a normal DVD player. The kit also comes with a simple instruction booklet.

So how�s the picture & sound quality…?

The quality of this product was amazingly more then I hoped for, in fact it�s superb! The video playback was smooth, quiet, and vivid. The sound obviously depends on the speakers you have, sounds great on my Philips surround sound stereo system.

Do I recommend this product?

YES. This kit is great even if you already have a DVD player and want another. The Remote kit also doubles as a Audio player, you can use it to playback your Mp3 files on the hard drive, no messing with cords. Remember, you mainly purchased your Xbox for gaming and the DVD playback was just an extra, a great extra at that. This Microsoft DVD kit is definitely High Quality all the way, and that�s why I recommend this product.

Hopefully Helped anyone this may concern.
My Score: 5 / 5 stars

J. Arias April 24, 2010 at 12:02 am

Very functional, makes you feel like your Xbox is complete. As for the playback quality of the Xbox, couldn’t tell the difference between it and the Pioneer DVC-302D that it kicked out of the shelf and being deployed to somewhere else within the house. Of course, you have to connect the Xbox to the Advanced AV pack or High Definition pack with an optical audio cable to get full Dolby Digital 5.1 and DTS, and S-Video or Component video inputs as well for video. Not too shabby overall, even considering the lack of eject and power buttons that some people are complaining about. Gotta get up from the couch sometimes. Good for blood circulation.

As mentioned by another reviewer, you can program your universal remote control with the codes for RCA DVD players and the Xbox IR receiver will respond to it. The power button on the universal remote still won’t work though, because this particular button will be interpreted as the display button on the Xbox remote. Worth noting too, that my universal remote doesn’t have an eject button.

A very cool feature that I found out when playing audio CDs: when the info button is pressed, the mood display in the left panel zooms in to fill the full TV screen. Instant 32″ lava lamp! Kinda looks like a mood setting screensaver. Break out the candles, turn off the lights, and let Peter Gabriel crank out!

Lastly, any geek worth his remote will test this baby with the games. After all, it seems like some of the buttons in the gamepad are mapped in and have equivalent buttons in the remote, right? I popped in DOA3 and tried to control it through the remote, but alas, geek mojo ran out. The remote control does not function as a wireless gamepad.
My Score: 4 / 5 stars

J. Mintzer April 24, 2010 at 1:11 am

Cut MS some slack people. They didn’t include DVD functionality via the controllers for some very good reasons:

1) That DVD license is expensive. I’d rather have people who are going to use the XBox as a DVD player to be the ones to subsidise the cost, instead of EVERYONE having to do it, since I already have a DVD player.

2) Sony found out the hard way when they released the PS2 in Japan; a lot of people bought the console JUST for it’s DVD playback features, and didn’t buy games for it. Now, I’m sure a lot of you know the standard console economic paradigm: lose money on the hardware, make money on the software. Thus, Sony lost big bux when this happened. I can’t blame Microsoft for wanting to make sure that doesn’t happen with them.

3) This is a PROGRESSIVE SCAN DVD player, which means it’s designed for higher quality pictures on HDTV. I don’t believe a lot of DVD players on the market are capible of that. Seems like a good deal to me.

I’ve been suprisingly impressed with the XBox. The graphics are DEFINATELY a cut above the PS2 (which I also own.) I find it telling that the LAUNCH title graphics look better than Sony’s latest PS2 games. The hard drive is damn convenient. If there is anything to be angry over, it’s those poorly designed controllers (Hint: MadCatz makes a decent replacement.)

In the end, those who are serious about using the Sony as a DVD player are going to buy a remote control kit anyhow (I certainly did) This seems no different to me, in the long and short of it. Microsoft was upfront on the box when they said it required the additional kit. It seems to me that a lot of people giving out the one star are just general Microsoft bashers anyhow.
My Score: 5 / 5 stars

Jeffrey R. Tilley Jr. April 24, 2010 at 3:00 am

I was very disappointed when I found out that my Xbox did not play DVD’s fresh out of the box. The growing trend of selling a system in pieces rather than shipping a complete system is one that I’m not very fond of. As much as these game systems cost, they should have everything you need right in the box.

While I loathed doing so, I eventually bought the DVD playback kit because I was going on a trip and wanted to be able to play movies and games during my down time. As it turns out, I like the Xbox so much as a DVD player that I now use it as my primary DVD player. My previous DVD player was an older model JVC and I’ve had tons of problems with it. It won’t play some DVD’s and I’ve had to take it to be repaired three times, twice in the first year I owned it.

I think the compaints in Amazons review are valid. The lack of an eject button or power button on the remote makes it less convenient, but I have to get up to change DVD’s anyway so I don’t find that much of a bother. I find the in-movie menu easy to use and an improvement over my JVC which basically makes me do the same thign when I want to change subtitles or lanuages. My biggest problem with the Xbox, and not as big as it may sound: for some reason it won’t read some disks when you first put them it. This is easily cured by turning the system on and the off again, and it’s only certain disks (Donnie Darko was one, Shreck was another) but I was concerned when it wouldn’t read the disk and a bit irritated.

The main reson I replaced my JVC with my Xbox is that I think the picture is better, and clearer. With the HDTV cables hooked up, the picture quality on my Sony Wega is crystal clear. Good transfer DVD’s like Star Wars TPM look absolutely incredible. I was really surprised at some of the cool high-end features like the ability to zoom. I can’t find any documentation to prove that the Xbox is a progressive scan DVD player, but I do know that when you attach the HDTV cables you are given several options for progressive scan viewing in the video section. My TV is not HDTV compatible (although it has component hookups) and I could not play the DVD’s with any of those settings. Even though I haven’t read anything about it, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that this IS a progressive scan DVD player with HDTV compatibility.

While I don’t think the sound is any better than my old DVD player, it’s just as good whether playing Dolby surround, Dolby Digital 5.1 or DTS.

While I was originally outrgaed at having to buy the ability to do something that I think the system should already be doing (and still do) I do feel like I got my money’s worth. The Xbox DVD playback far surpasses the other DVD playing game systems and even most mid to low end DVD players. The reviewers that have said they preferred the PS2 DVD playback boggle my mind. They either don’t own an XBox with the full get-up or are loyal PS2 owners and want it to be true. I own a PS2 and it’s far inferior when playing DVD’s. Not even in the same league in this particular category. The Xbox is still the best deal on the market and is only going to get better.
My Score: 4 / 5 stars

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