An Xbox 360 requires several different kinds of cables in order to be hooked up to a television. The cables required are: audio cables, image quality cables, and a cable to link systems.
Xbox is an old system that was discontinued and replaced by the Xbox 360. Most people think that the PS3 is better than the Xbox 360 based on annual sales this decade. The problem is many individuals don't understand it is a complete system that is better or not. Do you have the internet either system is better than one without it. Do you have a HDTV both systems were not designed to operate best on 480i TVs.
An Xbox 360 is capable of playing HD movies as long as you have an "Xbox 360 HD player." The Xbox 360 itself can be viewed and played in the HD content. You will need some HD equipment which includes a HD TV (some will say HD ready - meaning 720p, others will say full HD - meaning 1080p). After getting a TV, use a HDMI cable to link your xbox to the TV. This will now show you HD. Any video game can be viewed at the full 1080p HD.
An xbox, A game, and a controller... ---EDIT--- and a tv, and all the xbox cables
Look at the back of your xbox 360 and that cord that makes the image appear on your TV at the part that is hooked in your xbox switch it to TV instead of the other option
Yes, Xbox 360 can break your TV, but that will cost you a lot of money
Different tvs and different accounts
Xbox 360s come with the standard AV cable used to connect to a standard tube television. So, you do not need an HDTV. However, games do look a lot better in high-definition.
I'm assuming you mean a LAN party. For a LAN party, you have to have multiple Xbox 360s and multiple TVs. Hook each Xbox up to a TV normally, and then connect an ethernet cord from each Xbox to the ports on the back of your router. Once this is complete with however many Xbox 360s you are going to use, start Halo 3 or Halo: Reach on all the systems. Once this is completed, change the network type to LAN for all systems involved (there can be a max of 4 systems with a max of 4 players per system). After this, it should be pretty self-explanatory to get the other systems into the lobby. I think it just automatically finds the lobby, or you have to select the network or something. I've only done this once. I know the first part is correct, but I'm just not exactly sure what it does once you switch all the consoles to LAN.NOTE: You cannot play via Xbox Live if you are hosting a LAN party. All systems and TVs must be at your house, connected to your router.Hope this helps!
plug a system link chord or an Ethernet chord from one xbox to the other or you'll have to have a connected hub or router for more than 2 360's
4 is the maximum allowed for one Xbox 360. If you system link you can have infinite as long as you have 1 console and all hookups, plus a TV, for every 4 players.
I'm assuming you mean a LAN party. For a LAN party, you have to have multiple Xbox 360s and multiple TVs. Hook each Xbox up to a TV normally, and then connect an ethernet cord from each Xbox to the ports on the back of your router. Once this is complete with however many Xbox 360s you are going to use, start Halo 3 or Halo: Reach on all the systems. Once this is completed, change the network type to LAN for all systems involved (there can be a max of 4 systems with a max of 4 players per system). After this, it should be pretty self-explanatory to get the other systems into the lobby. I think it just automatically finds the lobby, or you have to select the network or something. I've only done this once. I know the first part is correct, but I'm just not exactly sure what it does once you switch all the consoles to LAN.NOTE: You cannot play via Xbox Live if you are hosting a LAN party. All systems and TVs must be at your house, connected to your router.Hope this helps!
you have to have two televisions and two xboxes and play system link while having a cord connecting both of the xboxes, i have played with 4 players, 2 on one tv and 2 on the other but next to each other, without xbox live
No you can't cos xbox 360 has no internet browser. PS3 does.
An optical cable is used to connect the audio out of the Xbox to the LHT854.
I'm assuming you mean a LAN party. For a LAN party, you have to have multiple Xbox 360s and multiple TVs. Hook each Xbox up to a TV normally, and then connect an ethernet cord from each Xbox to the ports on the back of your router. Once this is complete with however many Xbox 360s you are going to use, start Halo 3 or Halo: Reach on all the systems. Once this is completed, change the network type to LAN for all systems involved (there can be a max of 4 systems with a max of 4 players per system). After this, it should be pretty self-explanatory to get the other systems into the lobby. I think it just automatically finds the lobby, or you have to select the network or something. I've only done this once. I know the first part is correct, but I'm just not exactly sure what it does once you switch all the consoles to LAN.NOTE: You cannot play via Xbox Live if you are hosting a LAN party. All systems and TVs must be at your house, connected to your router.Hope this helps!
If you count a router cable as a ethernet cable, yes. An ethernet cable is what you plug from your xbox into a laptop/router/modem to connect to xbox live. The following SKU's come with ethernet cables. *Xbox 360 PRO *Xbox 360S *Xbox 360 Elite The xbox 360 CORE and ARCADE have no ethernet cables. Hope this helped.