Xbox – Will installing a game on Xbox allow me to bypass a location at which the disc becomes unreadable

technical-issuesxbox-360

I purchased "Batman: Arkham City" 7 days ago, and I was playing and it began saying "Disc Unreadable".

I proceeded to inspect the disc and noticed a sort of blur in the disc so it doesn't look the way it should in a good recorded disc. So I couldn't get past a certain point in the game because I would always get that message.

I would try to go exchange it but I purchased it in the USA and I live in Mexico and can't go again before the 15 days warranty expires 🙁 so what I did was I installed the game on the Xbox and after this I was able to play normally (past that point where I would always get the unreadable disc message).

My question is, will this allow me to finish the game normally? It will be really frustrating if not because there's literally no way I can exchange it and I feel I just threw money down the drain if so.. 🙁

Best Answer

Once installed from the disc to the hard drive, the Xbox only uses the disc at startup in order to verify that the correct disc is in the drive. Past that point, it won't read the disc again (typically). I'm a little surprised that the installation passed the bad area of the disc, but the game doesn't.

What you might want to do is contact customer support for the game, usually there's a phone number, email address, or website in the paper manual that came with the disc. If it was defective when you opened it, and you can't return it to the store, they might be willing to exchange your copy somehow. Since you live in a different area than where you purchased it, they might give you a hard time, but it's at least worth a shot. You'll want to keep your receipt and all the packaging, as sometimes they'll want you to prove you bought it by mailing it to them, or sending them scans or pictures of some part of it.

If that doesn't work, as a last resort you might want to take the disc somewhere locally that sells or rents used discs (DVDs or video games) as they generally have resurfacing machines that you can use for a nominal cost. Doing this may or may not make any improvement in the status of the disc, but it's still worth a shot if you run out of options.