![]() On the other hand, I have a 65” 4K OLED TV and I want games to look the very best possible on it. I like the idea of saving $200 quite a lot. Meanwhile it will play games at 1440p at up to 120fps, outperforming the most powerful console currently available. If you don’t have a 4K TV to begin with, this might be the better choice-it’s certainly the more affordable one. The Xbox Series S sacrifices nothing in speed or performance, but can’t play games in 4K (though it will upscale). MORE FROM FORBES Everyone Is Making Fun Of The Xbox Series S By Erik Kainīasically, the Xbox Series X is for anyone who values the most power possible in a video game console and wants to game at native 4K on their big, shiny HDTV. That could mean it will fit better on your shelves. Otherwise, the S might be for you.īeyond this, the Xbox Series S is smaller and comes in Robot White instead of black. If you want physical media, splurge on the Xbox Series X. Like the PS5 All Digital Edition and the Xbox One S Digital Edition, the Xbox Series S doesn’t come with a disc drive which allows it to be cheaper, smaller and maybe even a bit quieter. This could be deal-breaker territory for some gamers. If you have a collection of 4K UHD Blu-rays laying around, or if you play your games off of physical media still, or if you want the option of buying or trading in used games, or if you just want to have a Blu-ray drive just in case, then you’re straight out of luck with the Xbox Series S. The Xbox Series S doesn’t have a disc drive. Meanwhile, the Xbox Series S will upscale to 4k.ģ. It’s possible that having less RAM will impact performance, but the hit won’t be too big, and if you don’t have a 4k TV it shouldn’t matter at all. So long as you’re fine with 1440p, the actual difference here should be fairly negligible. This allows developers to decrease file size for Xbox Series S games, taking up less space on your SSD. Games will require less memory and storage space since they’ll be playing at 1440p and using smaller assets. You’d think less RAM and a smaller SSD would hit the Xbox Series S’s performance, but it really shouldn’t in practical terms. The Xbox Series S Has Less RAM and a smaller SSD. In other words, a more powerful GPU is not the be-all end-all here.Ģ. It will also still utilize the super fast SSD storage that enables things like Quick Resume (allowing you to quickly change games and so forth) and you can upgrade the same amount of storage. The framerate will be the same on both machines and while the Series X might look a little bit better, the Series S will still have great-looking games and a fraction of the cost. The Xbox Series S will output at 1440p rather than 4K, but it will still upscale on 4K television sets. What this translates to, however, is simply a matter of resolution. The Xbox Series X has 12.15 teraflops of GPU power while the Xbox Series S has just 4 teraflops of GPU power-fewer than the Xbox One X despite being a much more powerful console (four times as powerful) overall. The latter is represented in the disparate teraflops. The Xbox Series X has a slightly faster CPU and a much more powerful GPU. The Xbox Series X has a much beefier graphics card. The biggest differences here are three-fold:ġ. Xbox Series S: 1 TB expansion card, USB HDD supportīoth consoles use HDMI 2.1 which means you’ll have no issues setting these up with modern TVs and sound systems, taking advantage of modern speaker setups, high-definition TVs and so forth.Xbox Series X: 1 TB expansion card, USB HDD support.Xbox Series S: 2.4 GB/s (raw), 4.8 GB/s (compressed).Xbox Series X: 2.4 GB/s (raw), 4.8 GB/s (compressed). ![]()
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