Microsoft hosted its E3 keynote Monday, and boy did it deliver! No more pushing Kinect or Xbox apps, this was gaming pure and simple. So here’s our roundup of some of their key announcements.A big beef gamers have with consoles (and also a stalwart argument  against them in the console vs PC standoff) has been the lack of backward compatibility. Microsoft is backing up on that now, and has said they will make Xbox 360 games playable on the Xbox One later this year; developers just have to approve the their titles for them to show up on the Xbox One. Microsoft are tweaking a batch of 100 last gen titles to be playable on the latest console, and gamers will (thankfully) not have to pay for titles they already own. You’ll also be able to play your old games in multiplayer on the Xbox One with friends that own the 360. Titles on the list of the first 100 include Mass Effect, Banjo Kazooie, Super Meat Boy, and Perfect Dark, among others.

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There’s a also a new “Elite” Xbox controller, a customisable gamepad that works on Windows 10 as well. Clearly a competitor to Valve’s Steam Controller, the Elite has remappable controls, a D-pad that can be swapped out, and four interchangeable stainless steel rear paddles. Users can also customise thumbstick sensitivity and toggle hair trigger locks on the top buttons, through a standalone app for Windows 10 and Xbox One. Settings are saved on the cloud, and you can even save two profiles on the gamepad itself. All this in the Xbox One Elite Wireless Controller for the “modest” price of US $149.99, available in October.