Xbox 360 NXE hard drive install chart established


Recommended Posts

I was going to have a reply to this, but everybody else to care of it for me.

The point is, even if the differences are small in some games now, developers can cater and build their games with HD installs in mind now. Not sure how that all works out but if they know its available, I bet they can really cut times down in the future.

Just because it doesn't matter now, doesn't mean it won't in the future.

No they can't

Since the HDD "install" is just making an image file of theDVD and putting it on the disk and loading from that. and games disks still need to be optimized for loading from DVD first and oremost, not optimized for being used as an image file.

The only way to really make it "faster" is to NOT use the features the 360 API/Devkits gives the developers for fast loading from the disk, like streaming and using the cache. So asically you can "optimize" it for the HDD by making the disk loading slower, but it doesn't really affect the disk loading at all.

The games that load faster they either don't use the cache, or they one one time long loadings for a very large region/map where the icnreased speed of the HDD helps as bit. But then you have other games that do use all the eatures the 360 has for speeding up loading times such as Halo, where it's actually slower on the HDD.

Guys, if you think HDD installs are useless, you must enjoy your 360 sounding like a jet that's about to take off. I do not. Less wear and tear on the DVD drive alone will be worth it, especially on games you play a lot.

This :D

My favourite feature of NXE so far haha.

Makes me want a bigger hard drive, but am I hell paying for a hard drive at the price they are at. Think I might do that hard drive mod when I have some spare cash about.

When I was at Circuit City yesterday, I saw that they had the 120GB drive in-stock for $139.99. Still a little too much for me though. They had the 20GB drives for $79.99. I'd rather have the 120GB drive though. Can't really say if I want to pay that much for a drive.

No they can't

Since the HDD "install" is just making an image file of theDVD and putting it on the disk and loading from that. and games disks still need to be optimized for loading from DVD first and oremost, not optimized for being used as an image file.

The only way to really make it "faster" is to NOT use the features the 360 API/Devkits gives the developers for fast loading from the disk, like streaming and using the cache. So asically you can "optimize" it for the HDD by making the disk loading slower, but it doesn't really affect the disk loading at all.

The games that load faster they either don't use the cache, or they one one time long loadings for a very large region/map where the icnreased speed of the HDD helps as bit. But then you have other games that do use all the eatures the 360 has for speeding up loading times such as Halo, where it's actually slower on the HDD.

Not saying your wrong, but devs will find a way to optimize this process in the future. Maybe not a huge leap, but like you said optimize it first for the DVD and move onto at least making sure it isn't slower with it installed to HD. :p

I think a few people in this thread have major ego problems that they've only got 20GB hard drives.

Look at it from this point of view, if only from this point of view. The XBOX 360 is well known to have a huge amount of issues including heat and laser issues. Less use of the DVD-Rom drive will lower internal system heat, if only by one or two degrees Celsius, and also your laser is going to last a LOT longer.

I'm playing Mirrors Edge at the moment, I've just done the first level twice, Once on DVD and once on HDD. The game occasionally "hiccups" when playing on the DVD Drive, when playing on the hard drive it was a lot more fluid.

Gears of War 2 has the best example though, no more pop-on-textures :p

You disc is more likely to get scratched from being inserted and removed every time you play, then if you were to just leave it in.

And why would you take it off? There's no difference.

It works the same exact way, except that loading is done from the HDD and not from the DVD.

to me its not about the time it takes to load a game. I am playing fable 2 and hdd install is great. Without hdd install, to travel from one area to another, it used to take 5-6 seconds to load but after I installed it to hdd, all the areas loads up instantly. So basically only loading I see is when I boot the game. After that it only take maximum 2 secs when I travel from one area to another.

I think a few people in this thread have major ego problems that they've only got 20GB hard drives.

Look at it from this point of view, if only from this point of view. The XBOX 360 is well known to have a huge amount of issues including heat and laser issues. Less use of the DVD-Rom drive will lower internal system heat, if only by one or two degrees Celsius, and also your laser is going to last a LOT longer.

I'm playing Mirrors Edge at the moment, I've just done the first level twice, Once on DVD and once on HDD. The game occasionally "hiccups" when playing on the DVD Drive, when playing on the hard drive it was a lot more fluid.

Gears of War 2 has the best example though, no more pop-on-textures :p

I still get Pop-on-Textures or atleast fading quality textures in Gears 2.

lol @ the war.

TJ, I understand what you are saying, but you must understand that while the advantages don't seem all that great to you, they do to a lot of other people. Try it, you might like it.

And be honest, you are more likely to do something else during an install than a loading screen, there's no real logic there.

What loading screen in LO takes 40 seconds? I played it quite a bit and don't remember an instance of loading going more than 10 or 15.

The only reason that 40 minutes isn't "gaming time" is because you're installing a game to the HDD, were you not installing it you would be playing. That 40 minute install time is longer than the total loading time while playing therefore it's useless.

You still lose total minutes of play time either way, but I'm pretty sure you lose MORE total minutes of play time if you use the install feature. It's pretty simple mathematics.

half life 2, loading screens 40 seconds right on the site. The annoying hiccups on the inventory screen in fable 2 add up quickly. Mass Effect and Oblivion loading times are even more examples. Especially when they recache data from one local to another.

you still dont understand nongaming time.

were you not installing it you would be playing. That 40 minute install time is longer than the total loading time while playing therefore it's useless.

I would not be using that time to play the xbox. I just stated, I would be doing other things around the house. Not every second of free time is game time. I would be multi-tasking, its a new revolutionary time managing system. Where as I would be installing it games off the disc while reading/watching television/cooking dinner/laundry/vacuuming/cleaning/surfing the web/replying to posts about "game time" etc.

I don't know if it's much of clue on how to start games, BUT.

Most likely the trick is to have a disc that has multiple security ID's attached to them, so you would only need one disc in.

Mostly for modded console people, and it's just a theory.

I have created a disc that has all most if not all content removed that has just the security ID so that the game can launch, but it doesn't work.

So I'm guessing either I removed something important, or that the disc needs to be the same size.

like someone previously mentioned, i don't understand why everyone is making such extreme arguments over an optional feature. you don't have to install all your games and don't need to avoid the feature completely to save the install time (hit install before you go to sleep ffs). personally, i play COD4 more than anything else, so i'll probably just install that one game since i only have a 20GB drive.

Guys, if you think HDD installs are useless, you must enjoy your 360 sounding like a jet that's about to take off.

Rubbish. If that's the case you must have the console in a very dirty and dusty place. My 360 is as quiet as the TV itself. I can barely hear anything running inside it. The only thing I hear is the game and sound effects that my 360 outputs.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • I bought this game. Played it for an hour, and then got a refund from Steam. Not a fun game at all.
    • Nothing Ear buds with active noise cancellation are at their lowest price ever with 51% off by Fiza Ali Amazon is currently offering the Nothing Ear wireless earbuds at their lowest price ever with 51% off limited prime deal. The earbuds feature an 11mm dynamic drivers with a ceramic diaphragm, and support high-resolution audio codecs including AAC, SBC, LDAC, and LHDC 5.0. They support active noise cancellation of up to 45dB across a frequency range of up to 5000Hz, and include a smart ANC algorithm, adaptive noise cancellation, and a transparency mode that allows surrounding sounds to be heard when needed. Connectivity is provided via Bluetooth 5.3, with support for multiple profiles including HFP, A2DP, AVRCP, and others. The earbuds also support dual connection, allowing them to be paired with two devices at the same time. Additional features include IP54 water and dust resistance for the earbuds and IP55 for the charging case, in-ear detection, pinch controls, low-latency mode, Google Fast Pair, Microsoft Swift Pair, and a three-microphone system per earbud for clearer voice calls. The Nothing X app, available on Android and iOS, provides access to custom EQ settings, bass enhancement, personal sound profiles, ear tip fit testing, firmware updates, customisable controls, dual-device management, and a find-my-earbuds feature. In terms of battery performance, each earbud has a 46mAh battery and the charging case has a 500mAh capacity. With active noise cancellation (ANC) turned off, the earbuds should offer up to 8.5 hours of playback on a single charge and up to 40.5 hours in total with the charging case. With ANC enabled, playback should last up to 5.2 hours on the earbuds and up to 24 hours with the case. For calls, talk time should reach up to 5 hours on the earbuds and 23 hours with the case when ANC is off, while ANC on should provide up to 4 hours on the earbuds and 18 hours with the case. Finally, fast charging should deliver up to 10 hours of playback from 10 minutes of charging when ANC is disabled. Nothing Ear Wireless Earbuds Bluetooth: $73.15 (Amazon US) - 51% off Good to know This Amazon deal is U.S. specific, and not available in other regions unless specified. We only use first-party seller links (at the time of article publishing); ensure that you purchase from a first-party seller link only. Check out Today's Deals on Amazon | or our recent tech deals. Become a Prime member (for Students or SNAP) via Neowin Get Prime Access - Prime for half price (for qualifying Medicaid, EBT, SNAP) Subscribe to Prime Video, Audible Plus, Music Unlimited or Kindle Unlimited via Neowin As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
    • Microsoft officially launched its Copilot Cowork enterprise AI agent on June 16, 2026, switching to usage-based pricing on the same day it disclosed it is considering a Microsoft-hosted version of China's DeepSeek V4 as a lower-cost engine for the platform — a pairing that puts the company on a collision course with both its enterprise customers' security teams and a White House that has spent months trying to wall off Chinese AI from American infrastructure.................... https://www.techtimes.com/articles/318647/20260618/microsoft-eyes-deepseek-v4-copilot-cowork-what-azure-hosting-cannot-fix.htm  
    • Forza Horizon 6 gets another hotfix for one of the game's online modes by Taras Buria Recently, Forza Horizon 6 players discovered an interesting glitch that allowed farming a crazy amount of in-game credits in a few minutes. Playground Games quickly pulled the plug on the exploit by disabling one of the game's online modes, and today, the studio is rolling out another hotfix. In my review, I complained about the game still showering gamers with cars, credits, and wheelspins. As such, earning money in Forza Horizon 6 is not a particularly difficult task. You simply have to play the game, crazy, I know. However, people still found an easier path to becoming a billionaire in Forza Horizon 6. All you had to do was purchase the Hummer EV, install a specific tune, shift in reverse while going at about 15 MPH, hit a wall, and get launched into the stratosphere at the speed of light. While mid-air, launch Eliminator and quickly get eliminated. Boom, the game just awarded you with a few million in-game credits. Initially, Playground Games disabled Eliminator to prevent people from farming credits. Now, following the release of the first balancing update, developers are rolling out a new update that re-enables Eliminator and gives users a free McLaren Sabre as a gesture of goodwill. Here is the changelog: One critical issue remains unpatched, though. There are quite a few reports of the game wiping gamers' saves, and developers are still looking into that. To avoid potential data loss, Playground Games recommends taking one of the steps outlined in a previously published support article.
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      AndreaB earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      Huge Trailer earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      Classifyskilleducation earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      eurospharma62 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      With What earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      592
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      171
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      76
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      68
    5. 5
      neufuse
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!