this post was submitted on 11 Aug 2023
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Neither of these things can be true, because they've been around since long before Microsoft got into the console game. I'm pretty sure Atari 2600 games had that prompt. I know NES games did.
https://blog.csdn.net/baozi3026/article/details/4272761
What earlier games were doing was very similar, but was done for different reasons. Arcade games had an attract mode that would show gameplay or intro cutscenes in a loop when the device wasn't in active use and had an "Insert Coin" flashing to attract players. The normal game would only started once coin got inserted into the arcade machine. Early console games had that attract mode too, just "insert coin" replaced with a "press start".
What makes the modern start screen different is that there is often no cutscene to skip, no gameplay to watch, it's just a pointless screen before you go to the main menu.
Wouldn't just going straight to the main menu qualify as an "interactive state that accepts player input within 20 seconds"?
Yes, but you'd have to get there in 20sec first, which in case of very elaborate main menus, might not always be the case. The start screen provides a safety buffer so that you never fail at this certification criteria, as all the loading time after the start screen doesn't count.