Xbox One players finally have some new old games to play on their newer machines, as more titles have been added to the compatibility list. Microsoft has steadily been adding titles to the list for a while now since the service debuted back in November last year, and this week's addition might be the best batch yet.
Microsoft has finally added "Call of Duty 2" originally for the Xbox 360 (a launch title, to be exact) to the compatibility list this week, after "Call of Duty: Black Ops" was finally made compatible back in May. "Call of Duty" games, such as "Call of Duty: Black Ops II" are unarguably the most-requested among old titles by Xbox players, and this is a step closer to getting them all in the game. "Call of Duty 2" costs $20 for anyone who doesn't own it yet; for those who already have it, it should already automatically show up in your library.
According to GameSpot, the other games most requested by Xbox One players are all of the "Call of Duty: Modern Warfare" titles, "Call of Duty: World at War," and "The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim." Although Microsoft added "Call of Duty 2," which was well-received in its release, there are no promises made by Microsoft on any of these other titles being made compatible for the newer console—though we're sure they're hard at work on it.
The addition of "Call of Duty 2" makes for around 230 games in the Xbox One's library of backwards-compatible games. The list currently includes "Assassin's Creed," "Assassin's Creed II," "Dark Souls," "Gears of War" 1-3, both "Left 4 Dead" games, "Saints Row IV," among many, many others. We'll let you know about all the other older titles Microsoft decides to make backwards-compatible as soon as we get information about them.