Cheap Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
I see a great many reviews in which people are saying that they received a 3rd party HDD, and not a Microsoft hard-drive. Remember Amazon has the A-Z guarantee if you’ve been misled… Same goes for whether or not it contains the transfer kit, which will cost if you purchase it separately. A new 120GB HDD should include the transfer kit, but I see a lot of people complaining that they didn’t receive one.
I purchased a “used” Xbox 360 120GB HDD from a private Amazon seller, and it works great, though –as stated in the listing– it didn`t include a TRANSFER KIT.
If you’re upgrading and don`t have the TRANSFER KIT, you’ve got a few things to do once you`ve attached your “new” HDD:
1.) Do a Gametag recovery, to get your old profile onto your new hard-drive. You’ll be prompted to do this during set-up once the new HDD has been attached… So no fuss, no muss. I should add that you do need to be connected to Xbox LIVE for this to work.
2.) After that, you can do a license transfer that will allow you to re-download anything you may have purchased off of LIVE. This can be done on Xbox.com, but you do need to have completed the step above first. If you’ve never purchased anything off of LIVE, you can skip this step.
3.) After that, it’s all about your game saves. Without a TRASFER KIT, you can use a flash-drive instead, which means reattaching your old HDD and moving everything on to a flash/stick-drive (do this in the console dashboard’s SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). Once completed, reattach your NEW HDD, and transfer whatever you need back off the flash-drive (again in SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). This is all VERY user friendly. However, one problem about using a flash drive was, for me, that a couple of the game saves wouldn’t transfer. This was only an issue with 3 games (out of more than two dozen)… But I did end up borrowing a friends TRANSFER KIT, to complete the process.
I guess if you’re like me and buying a used/refurb on the cheap without a transfer kit, I would suggest trying the flash-drive method first, and see if there is anything that can’t be moved. If there is, I guess it then becomes an issue for you as to whether or not those saves are worth the purchase of a kit.

Available at Amazon
Cheap “Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
Read the rest of this entry »
Cheap Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
I see a great many reviews in which people are saying that they received a 3rd party HDD, and not a Microsoft hard-drive. Remember Amazon has the A-Z guarantee if you’ve been misled… Same goes for whether or not it contains the transfer kit, which will cost if you purchase it separately. A new 120GB HDD should include the transfer kit, but I see a lot of people complaining that they didn’t receive one.
I purchased a “used” Xbox 360 120GB HDD from a private Amazon seller, and it works great, though –as stated in the listing– it didn`t include a TRANSFER KIT.
If you’re upgrading and don`t have the TRANSFER KIT, you’ve got a few things to do once you`ve attached your “new” HDD:
1.) Do a Gametag recovery, to get your old profile onto your new hard-drive. You’ll be prompted to do this during set-up once the new HDD has been attached… So no fuss, no muss. I should add that you do need to be connected to Xbox LIVE for this to work.
2.) After that, you can do a license transfer that will allow you to re-download anything you may have purchased off of LIVE. This can be done on Xbox.com, but you do need to have completed the step above first. If you’ve never purchased anything off of LIVE, you can skip this step.
3.) After that, it’s all about your game saves. Without a TRASFER KIT, you can use a flash-drive instead, which means reattaching your old HDD and moving everything on to a flash/stick-drive (do this in the console dashboard’s SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). Once completed, reattach your NEW HDD, and transfer whatever you need back off the flash-drive (again in SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). This is all VERY user friendly. However, one problem about using a flash drive was, for me, that a couple of the game saves wouldn’t transfer. This was only an issue with 3 games (out of more than two dozen)… But I did end up borrowing a friends TRANSFER KIT, to complete the process.
I guess if you’re like me and buying a used/refurb on the cheap without a transfer kit, I would suggest trying the flash-drive method first, and see if there is anything that can’t be moved. If there is, I guess it then becomes an issue for you as to whether or not those saves are worth the purchase of a kit.

Available at Amazon
Cheap “Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
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Cheap XBox 360 Elite Hard Drive 120GB — Black Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop

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Cheap “XBox 360 Elite Hard Drive 120GB — Black” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
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Cheap XBox 360 Elite Hard Drive 120GB — Black Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop

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Cheap “XBox 360 Elite Hard Drive 120GB — Black” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
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August 29th, 2010 in
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Cheap Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
I see a great many reviews in which people are saying that they received a 3rd party HDD, and not a Microsoft hard-drive. Remember Amazon has the A-Z guarantee if you’ve been misled… Same goes for whether or not it contains the transfer kit, which will cost if you purchase it separately. A new 120GB HDD should include the transfer kit, but I see a lot of people complaining that they didn’t receive one.
I purchased a “used” Xbox 360 120GB HDD from a private Amazon seller, and it works great, though –as stated in the listing– it didn`t include a TRANSFER KIT.
If you’re upgrading and don`t have the TRANSFER KIT, you’ve got a few things to do once you`ve attached your “new” HDD:
1.) Do a Gametag recovery, to get your old profile onto your new hard-drive. You’ll be prompted to do this during set-up once the new HDD has been attached… So no fuss, no muss. I should add that you do need to be connected to Xbox LIVE for this to work.
2.) After that, you can do a license transfer that will allow you to re-download anything you may have purchased off of LIVE. This can be done on Xbox.com, but you do need to have completed the step above first. If you’ve never purchased anything off of LIVE, you can skip this step.
3.) After that, it’s all about your game saves. Without a TRASFER KIT, you can use a flash-drive instead, which means reattaching your old HDD and moving everything on to a flash/stick-drive (do this in the console dashboard’s SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). Once completed, reattach your NEW HDD, and transfer whatever you need back off the flash-drive (again in SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). This is all VERY user friendly. However, one problem about using a flash drive was, for me, that a couple of the game saves wouldn’t transfer. This was only an issue with 3 games (out of more than two dozen)… But I did end up borrowing a friends TRANSFER KIT, to complete the process.
I guess if you’re like me and buying a used/refurb on the cheap without a transfer kit, I would suggest trying the flash-drive method first, and see if there is anything that can’t be moved. If there is, I guess it then becomes an issue for you as to whether or not those saves are worth the purchase of a kit.

Available at Amazon
Cheap “Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
Read the rest of this entry »
Cheap Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
I see a great many reviews in which people are saying that they received a 3rd party HDD, and not a Microsoft hard-drive. Remember Amazon has the A-Z guarantee if you’ve been misled… Same goes for whether or not it contains the transfer kit, which will cost if you purchase it separately. A new 120GB HDD should include the transfer kit, but I see a lot of people complaining that they didn’t receive one.
I purchased a “used” Xbox 360 120GB HDD from a private Amazon seller, and it works great, though –as stated in the listing– it didn`t include a TRANSFER KIT.
If you’re upgrading and don`t have the TRANSFER KIT, you’ve got a few things to do once you`ve attached your “new” HDD:
1.) Do a Gametag recovery, to get your old profile onto your new hard-drive. You’ll be prompted to do this during set-up once the new HDD has been attached… So no fuss, no muss. I should add that you do need to be connected to Xbox LIVE for this to work.
2.) After that, you can do a license transfer that will allow you to re-download anything you may have purchased off of LIVE. This can be done on Xbox.com, but you do need to have completed the step above first. If you’ve never purchased anything off of LIVE, you can skip this step.
3.) After that, it’s all about your game saves. Without a TRASFER KIT, you can use a flash-drive instead, which means reattaching your old HDD and moving everything on to a flash/stick-drive (do this in the console dashboard’s SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). Once completed, reattach your NEW HDD, and transfer whatever you need back off the flash-drive (again in SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). This is all VERY user friendly. However, one problem about using a flash drive was, for me, that a couple of the game saves wouldn’t transfer. This was only an issue with 3 games (out of more than two dozen)… But I did end up borrowing a friends TRANSFER KIT, to complete the process.
I guess if you’re like me and buying a used/refurb on the cheap without a transfer kit, I would suggest trying the flash-drive method first, and see if there is anything that can’t be moved. If there is, I guess it then becomes an issue for you as to whether or not those saves are worth the purchase of a kit.

Available at Amazon
Cheap “Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
Read the rest of this entry »
Cheap Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
I see a great many reviews in which people are saying that they received a 3rd party HDD, and not a Microsoft hard-drive. Remember Amazon has the A-Z guarantee if you’ve been misled… Same goes for whether or not it contains the transfer kit, which will cost if you purchase it separately. A new 120GB HDD should include the transfer kit, but I see a lot of people complaining that they didn’t receive one.
I purchased a “used” Xbox 360 120GB HDD from a private Amazon seller, and it works great, though –as stated in the listing– it didn`t include a TRANSFER KIT.
If you’re upgrading and don`t have the TRANSFER KIT, you’ve got a few things to do once you`ve attached your “new” HDD:
1.) Do a Gametag recovery, to get your old profile onto your new hard-drive. You’ll be prompted to do this during set-up once the new HDD has been attached… So no fuss, no muss. I should add that you do need to be connected to Xbox LIVE for this to work.
2.) After that, you can do a license transfer that will allow you to re-download anything you may have purchased off of LIVE. This can be done on Xbox.com, but you do need to have completed the step above first. If you’ve never purchased anything off of LIVE, you can skip this step.
3.) After that, it’s all about your game saves. Without a TRASFER KIT, you can use a flash-drive instead, which means reattaching your old HDD and moving everything on to a flash/stick-drive (do this in the console dashboard’s SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). Once completed, reattach your NEW HDD, and transfer whatever you need back off the flash-drive (again in SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). This is all VERY user friendly. However, one problem about using a flash drive was, for me, that a couple of the game saves wouldn’t transfer. This was only an issue with 3 games (out of more than two dozen)… But I did end up borrowing a friends TRANSFER KIT, to complete the process.
I guess if you’re like me and buying a used/refurb on the cheap without a transfer kit, I would suggest trying the flash-drive method first, and see if there is anything that can’t be moved. If there is, I guess it then becomes an issue for you as to whether or not those saves are worth the purchase of a kit.

Available at Amazon
Cheap “Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
Read the rest of this entry »
Cheap Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
I see a great many reviews in which people are saying that they received a 3rd party HDD, and not a Microsoft hard-drive. Remember Amazon has the A-Z guarantee if you’ve been misled… Same goes for whether or not it contains the transfer kit, which will cost if you purchase it separately. A new 120GB HDD should include the transfer kit, but I see a lot of people complaining that they didn’t receive one.
I purchased a “used” Xbox 360 120GB HDD from a private Amazon seller, and it works great, though –as stated in the listing– it didn`t include a TRANSFER KIT.
If you’re upgrading and don`t have the TRANSFER KIT, you’ve got a few things to do once you`ve attached your “new” HDD:
1.) Do a Gametag recovery, to get your old profile onto your new hard-drive. You’ll be prompted to do this during set-up once the new HDD has been attached… So no fuss, no muss. I should add that you do need to be connected to Xbox LIVE for this to work.
2.) After that, you can do a license transfer that will allow you to re-download anything you may have purchased off of LIVE. This can be done on Xbox.com, but you do need to have completed the step above first. If you’ve never purchased anything off of LIVE, you can skip this step.
3.) After that, it’s all about your game saves. Without a TRASFER KIT, you can use a flash-drive instead, which means reattaching your old HDD and moving everything on to a flash/stick-drive (do this in the console dashboard’s SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). Once completed, reattach your NEW HDD, and transfer whatever you need back off the flash-drive (again in SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). This is all VERY user friendly. However, one problem about using a flash drive was, for me, that a couple of the game saves wouldn’t transfer. This was only an issue with 3 games (out of more than two dozen)… But I did end up borrowing a friends TRANSFER KIT, to complete the process.
I guess if you’re like me and buying a used/refurb on the cheap without a transfer kit, I would suggest trying the flash-drive method first, and see if there is anything that can’t be moved. If there is, I guess it then becomes an issue for you as to whether or not those saves are worth the purchase of a kit.

Available at Amazon
Cheap “Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
Read the rest of this entry »
Cheap Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
I see a great many reviews in which people are saying that they received a 3rd party HDD, and not a Microsoft hard-drive. Remember Amazon has the A-Z guarantee if you’ve been misled… Same goes for whether or not it contains the transfer kit, which will cost if you purchase it separately. A new 120GB HDD should include the transfer kit, but I see a lot of people complaining that they didn’t receive one.
I purchased a “used” Xbox 360 120GB HDD from a private Amazon seller, and it works great, though –as stated in the listing– it didn`t include a TRANSFER KIT.
If you’re upgrading and don`t have the TRANSFER KIT, you’ve got a few things to do once you`ve attached your “new” HDD:
1.) Do a Gametag recovery, to get your old profile onto your new hard-drive. You’ll be prompted to do this during set-up once the new HDD has been attached… So no fuss, no muss. I should add that you do need to be connected to Xbox LIVE for this to work.
2.) After that, you can do a license transfer that will allow you to re-download anything you may have purchased off of LIVE. This can be done on Xbox.com, but you do need to have completed the step above first. If you’ve never purchased anything off of LIVE, you can skip this step.
3.) After that, it’s all about your game saves. Without a TRASFER KIT, you can use a flash-drive instead, which means reattaching your old HDD and moving everything on to a flash/stick-drive (do this in the console dashboard’s SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). Once completed, reattach your NEW HDD, and transfer whatever you need back off the flash-drive (again in SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). This is all VERY user friendly. However, one problem about using a flash drive was, for me, that a couple of the game saves wouldn’t transfer. This was only an issue with 3 games (out of more than two dozen)… But I did end up borrowing a friends TRANSFER KIT, to complete the process.
I guess if you’re like me and buying a used/refurb on the cheap without a transfer kit, I would suggest trying the flash-drive method first, and see if there is anything that can’t be moved. If there is, I guess it then becomes an issue for you as to whether or not those saves are worth the purchase of a kit.

Available at Amazon
Cheap “Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
Read the rest of this entry »
Cheap Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
I see a great many reviews in which people are saying that they received a 3rd party HDD, and not a Microsoft hard-drive. Remember Amazon has the A-Z guarantee if you’ve been misled… Same goes for whether or not it contains the transfer kit, which will cost if you purchase it separately. A new 120GB HDD should include the transfer kit, but I see a lot of people complaining that they didn’t receive one.
I purchased a “used” Xbox 360 120GB HDD from a private Amazon seller, and it works great, though –as stated in the listing– it didn`t include a TRANSFER KIT.
If you’re upgrading and don`t have the TRANSFER KIT, you’ve got a few things to do once you`ve attached your “new” HDD:
1.) Do a Gametag recovery, to get your old profile onto your new hard-drive. You’ll be prompted to do this during set-up once the new HDD has been attached… So no fuss, no muss. I should add that you do need to be connected to Xbox LIVE for this to work.
2.) After that, you can do a license transfer that will allow you to re-download anything you may have purchased off of LIVE. This can be done on Xbox.com, but you do need to have completed the step above first. If you’ve never purchased anything off of LIVE, you can skip this step.
3.) After that, it’s all about your game saves. Without a TRASFER KIT, you can use a flash-drive instead, which means reattaching your old HDD and moving everything on to a flash/stick-drive (do this in the console dashboard’s SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). Once completed, reattach your NEW HDD, and transfer whatever you need back off the flash-drive (again in SYSTEM SETTINGS/MEMORY). This is all VERY user friendly. However, one problem about using a flash drive was, for me, that a couple of the game saves wouldn’t transfer. This was only an issue with 3 games (out of more than two dozen)… But I did end up borrowing a friends TRANSFER KIT, to complete the process.
I guess if you’re like me and buying a used/refurb on the cheap without a transfer kit, I would suggest trying the flash-drive method first, and see if there is anything that can’t be moved. If there is, I guess it then becomes an issue for you as to whether or not those saves are worth the purchase of a kit.

Available at Amazon
Cheap “Xbox 360 120GB Hard Drive” Discount Review at Xbox 360 Hard Drive 120gb Shop
Read the rest of this entry »