From Microsoft's official statement post-the E3 uproar, back on the 19th of June:
An internet connection will not be required to play offline Xbox One
games – After a one-time system set-up with a new Xbox One, you can
play any disc based game without ever connecting online again. There
is no 24 hour connection requirement and you can take your Xbox One
anywhere you want and play your games, just like on Xbox 360.
(their emphasis)
That "one-time system setup" includes an initial day one update of about 500MB that the console needs to download to be fully functional, but you don't need to sign in to your console or Xbox Live to receive that update, the console will find and download it as soon as it is first internet connected. (source: this was the first thing my Xbox One did yesterday after switching on and checking my wired internet connection, and before taking me through the initial set up of signing in and calibrating the Kinect).
Of course that statement was published under the name of Don Mattrick, then President of Microsoft's Interactive Entertainment Business, who has since left Microsoft to join Zynga, so I can understand anyone worrying if that statement is still true.
Marc Whitten, who is still, Microsoft's Xbox One chief product officer was interviewed by Kotaku, and this is what was said:
...your new Xbox console would have to connect online once in order to
do the things Microsoft described today. And then you can keep it
offline and play games without re-connecting to the Internet forever.
I don't believe that there has been anything since contradicting that statement.
(Addendum: it was briefly possible to pull down the day one patch on a PC and transfer to an offline Xbox on a USB stick, but Microsoft have just removed that facility from their website, and have said that Microsoft Support will take people through a manual update process if necessary)
Lots of optional apps and services do require an internet connection, but these are optional parts of the experience. Some examples:
- Skype requires an internet connection, so that it can do video
calling and messaging.
- Video streaming services, such as Netflix,
Amazon Streaming and Hulu, require an internet connection to stream
movies.
- Multiplayer gaming over Xbox Live requires an internet
connection to connect the players. Some future games may be multi-player only (eg Titanfall) and so won't work without an internet connection.
Can we do it at the same time? Ie. both fire up my accounts Battlefield 4 (he doesn't have BF4 on his account) and play it, together?
Yes, this is possible. I did it with Destiny, CoD Ghosts and some other games.
And your brother would also get xbox live gold access if you have it.
Is this illegal in any way?
Will there be any downsides to this? Such as both xboxes (which are now thus not our "home xbox" any more) require more frequent logins, or other such things?
I am using this for about one month and have no problems at all. As far as I know is this intended to used like this.
You just need to login once to setup the home xbox. After the home xbox is set your brother can login as usual.
Best Answer
If you are afraid of tuning, then don't. The game will choose recommended cars for you and pre-tune them for the specific career section you are entering when you purchase it.
Every car in its league is competitive enough that there is no clear cut best, although some cars will have a slight advantage. These are usually the ones marked "recommended"