Microsoft's next-generation game console is slated for a late 2013 launch in the U.S., but gamers in Asia will have to wait.
June 11, 2013 7:09 AM PDT
Microsoft's Xbox One.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
Microsoft's Xbox One might be making a splash at the E3 Gaming expo this week, but it won't be making a splash in Asia until later next year.
The Xbox One won't launch in Asia until late 2014, Microsoft confirmed to The Wall Street Journal in an article published Tuesday. Microsoft's regional vice president of sales and marketing in Asia told the Journal that his company is following a "staged approach," noting that Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and India will be first ones in Asia to get the console next year.
[h=3]Related stories[/h]
Interestingly, Microsoft has yet to say what it has planned for Japan. Over the years, Japan has been an exceedingly tough market for the Xbox, and sales have proven sluggish. It's not clear how Microsoft hopes to change the fate of the Xbox One in Japan.
Still, gamers who live in Asian countries won't be too happy to hear that they'll need to wait over a year to get their hands on the Xbox One. Microsoft has already said that the Xbox One will launch in the U.S. later this year for $499.


(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
Microsoft's Xbox One might be making a splash at the E3 Gaming expo this week, but it won't be making a splash in Asia until later next year.
The Xbox One won't launch in Asia until late 2014, Microsoft confirmed to The Wall Street Journal in an article published Tuesday. Microsoft's regional vice president of sales and marketing in Asia told the Journal that his company is following a "staged approach," noting that Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, and India will be first ones in Asia to get the console next year.
[h=3]Related stories[/h]
- Nvidia points out consoles still can't keep up with its chips
- Microsoft exec on Xbox One: No Internet? Get an Xbox 360
- Microsoft's E3 booth tour (pictures)
- What I learned about the Xbox One from E3
- Xbox One controller feels light, has buttons of the snappy varierty (pictures)
Interestingly, Microsoft has yet to say what it has planned for Japan. Over the years, Japan has been an exceedingly tough market for the Xbox, and sales have proven sluggish. It's not clear how Microsoft hopes to change the fate of the Xbox One in Japan.
Still, gamers who live in Asian countries won't be too happy to hear that they'll need to wait over a year to get their hands on the Xbox One. Microsoft has already said that the Xbox One will launch in the U.S. later this year for $499.
