![]() Given 3D’s dwindling fortunes, though, there doesn’t honestly seem to be much incentive for Microsoft to deliver such an update. This possibly opens the door to 3D being addable to the Series X later via a firmware update. So all I can think is that while the core drive and some level of the Series X’s disc playback software CAN handle 3D, support for it has been removed at some later stage in the Xbox’s signal ‘journey’. And no settings I could find on any 3D display managed to persuade the Series X that it was connected to a 3D display. There’s no option to select 3D as an output option in the Xbox Series X’s video menus like there was on the Xbox One X, though. So instead of an error telling you that your player is not 3D capable, like you get with the PS5, on the Series X you get an error message from the 3D disc saying, effectively, that ‘your 3D disc player doesn’t recognize that it’s connected to a 3D display’. However, the console can’t then recognize connected displays as being capable of playing 3D, even when they are. The thing is, its drive is actually recognized by 3D discs as being capable of playing 3D. ![]()
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