It has long been reported that Microsoft is dealing with two Xbox consoles for next-gen, aiming to claim both ends of the marketplace. And now, we can verify certainly that the pricing scheme ought to be extremely familiar, matching that of the Xbox One X and Xbox One S of the past.
We can validate through our sources that the entry-level Xbox Series S will cost $299 at retail, with a $25 per month Xbox All Access funding choice, which Microsoft is preparing to press tough by means of various retailers and a big global rollout. The more powerful Xbox Series X will cost $499, with a $35 monthly Xbox All Access funding option.
Source: @_h0x0d_ The Xbox Series S and Xbox Series X together.
Both consoles will release on November 10, 2020
Microsoft will push Xbox All Access funding far more broadly than it did this gen, which was seen as a little a pilot program. Were anticipating Xbox All Access to roll out to far more markets than it did formerly, and we likewise expect the Xbox Series consoles to gun for a worldwide synchronised launch in all existing Xbox markets, rather than the sluggish rollout we saw for the Xbox One in 2013.
The Xbox Series S just leaked (through Brad Sams), offering us a look at Microsofts entry-level next-gen SKU. The Xbox Series S is little enough to fit inside an Xbox Series X, and we expect it to be around 4TF RDNA2, making it roughly around as effective as the Xbox One X, perhaps geared towards 1080p displays with much better frame rates. We dont have additional details on the consoles abilities beyond that, however we anticipate NVME drives, and a number of the newer “next-gen” features like fast resuming several games, and ray tracing.
The costs Microsoft have advanced for the Xbox Series S and Xbox Series X put them securely in-line with the Xbox One S and Xbox One X, and it will be interesting to see how Sony prices the competing PlayStation 5 in action.
pic.twitter.com/VMkQY9271K— WalkingCat (@_h0x0d_) September 8, 2020.
The Xbox Series X is a 12TF beast of a console that will boast 4K resolution and 60 FPS as standard, with some games, like Halo Infinite, going all the way approximately 120 FPS in multiplayer.