Average Xbox One owner uses console 5 hours a day. Really?

澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Microsoft's corporate VP of the Xbox division, Phil Harrison, that some “really amazing engagement numbers” show that Xbox One console owners are “not only buying the console, but loving it”. He then went on to declare: “Each Xbox One owner is spending five hours a day on average using the console, which is just extraordinary.” That♔ is ‘extraordinary’. In fact, I’d go further to say it’s unbelievable. Chewbacca is properly living on Endor with that one. But then, as someone who works for 344567.top, I am thinking about it in terms of gaming, and that's not what Mr Harrison means.

I contacted Microsoft for clarification and was told that, according to Microsoft's internal 🔴data, “On average, Xbox One users around the world spend more than five hours a day on their console watching TV, playing games, using apps like Hulu, Netflix or Skype and spending time on the 𝐆dashboard.”

I'd love to think that gaming is the primary use for Xbox One. I rꦫeally would. We’ve all got stories to tell of mammoth gaming sessions. For me it was playing Advance Wars on GBA so hard at university, I got through a new set of batteries in one day. It happens. But not every single day. Does any♛one really game that much? No, I mean apart from .

I fear the answer is more mundane. According to Microsoft's data, this could also count people who leave their Xbox One idle on on the dashboard, 24 hours a day, when they're not doing something with it. Or they could just be gaming a bit, then watchꦗing TV through the HDMI input. If your TV is connected to the Xbox One, the onꩵly way you can watch it is by switching on the console. And that counts as 'using' it.

Tellingly (although I am in serious danger of looking like a dick when I say this), Harrison also failed to specify which average he is talking about. He&🌃rsquo;s likely talking about ‘mean’. Let’s say the ‘average’ in this case is the average most people mean when they say it (funnily enough, ‘mean’ is exactly what 𝓡it’s called’), where you add up all the hours played and divide it by the number of players.

Supposing Harrison is using that method, if two Xbox One owners ‘average’ 5 hours of play time ♛a day, that could mean they both play for 5 hours. But it could also mean one played for 10 hours and the other didn’t even switch their machine on. That means for every Xbox One owner who used the console for less than 5 hours, someone else had♑ to play that extra time for them as well as put in 5 hours a day on their own.

Think that's the sexiest use of maths you ever heard? You ain't seen nothin' yet! Different types of averages can also yield data that isn't necessarily a true reflection of the data. Mode is is a good example. That is the most common occurance of any one result in the data. So if ten people played with an ‘average’ of 𓆉5 hours, th🐬at could mean two people played for exactly 5 hours, but everyone else played for different times all of less than five minutes. The 'average' is 5 hours. It's not a lie, but not wholly truthful either.

After that... I've reached the limit of my GCSE maths recollections. L✅ike a boss.

The thing about statistics is that they can be used to prove anything. Forfty percent of all people know that. And who wouldn't work the system to put a positive spin on a product they represent? But the main reason I find it hard to accept this statistic as a massive win is that Microsoft never seems to be transparent about how well the Xbox One is doing, even though it's reported as being the best-selling console in the UK for the past three weeks. That’s why we hear about ‘units shipped’ not ‘units sold’, and ‘percentage increases’ instead of aꦍctual sales figures.

All this '5 hours' stat does is raise questions in my mind about how people are using their 🅷behemoth new console. And the answer, unless the world really is more addicted to Titanfall than I could ever imagine, is logically that--on average--they're not using it like✤ a console at all. But then, isn't that exactly what Microsoft wanted all along?

Justin was a GamesRadar staffer for 10 years but is now a freelancer, musician and videographer. He's big on retro, Sega and racing games (especially retro Sega racing games) and currently also writes for Play Magazine, Traxion.gg, PC Gamer and TopTenReviews, as well as running his own YouTube channel. Having learned to love all platforms equally after Sega left the hardware industry (sniff), his favourite games include Christmas NiGHTS into Dreams, Zelda BotW, Sea of Thieves, Sega Rally Champio𒆙nship and Treasure Island Dizzy.