By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
dsister said:
Tony_Stark said:

You can do it over the phone.


So... you call them, tell them to migrate the licenses and what? The console automatically does it? It has to get an update somewhere along the lines. 

Tell you what, how do you do this without any access from XBL at all? According to Xbox.com I have over 100 items that are licensed to my old console that I need on my new console. 

Allow me to step in, here.  I have two Xbox 360's--my main 360 (250gb 360s) and the family 360 in the living room (60gb Jasper).  I tried to do the transfer on Xbox.com and for some reason, it wouldn't go through.  I called the phone number and some really nice lady answered the phone.  I told her my situation and they performed the license transfer.  I got an email saying the transfer was complete.

Here's the unbelievable part:  All of the content that I'd purchased on the original 360 (the 60gb) is still playable on BOTH 360's(online or offline no matter who wants to play it)!!  Fifty-Plus full fledged Arcade games!!  I smile everytime I think about it.

This whole article has absolutely nothing to do with you guy's debate, though.

Here's the question we need to find the answer to:  When a console is "banned from Xbox Live", is it banned entirely?  Can it still purchase content or rent movies?  Is it just banned from online multi-player?  Part of me thinks that it is forced to revert to silver but I have nothing to base this on.  If it can connect to the internet at all, I'm sure XBL customer service can perform the  license transfer and the guy can just queue up the content on Xbox.com.  But I don't know.  Anyway, carry on.

*edit*  I just youtub-ed "Banned 360".  I was wrong.  If a 360 is banned, you can't do shit!!  I guess this is written in the user agreement.  But who reads that shit?