It has long been rumored that Micro .ft is working on two Xbox consoles for the Next-Gen, aiming to claim both ends of the market. And now, we can really confirm that the pricing scheme should be very familiar, matching the Xbox One X and the Xbox One S of the YX year.
We can confirm from our sources that the retail price of the entry level Xbox Series S will be 29 299, with 25 25 per month being the Xbox All Access financing option, which MicroSF intends to push hard through various retailers and large global rollouts. The more powerful Xbox Series X is priced at 4 9499, with the એક્સ 35 per month Xbox All Access financing option.
Both consoles will launch on November 10, 2020.
The Xbox Series S has just been leaked (via Brad Sons), giving us an entry-level next-gen SKU from Micro .ft. Gives a glimpse of. The Xbox Series S is small enough to fit inside an Xbox Series X, and we expect it to be around 4TF RDNA2, making it almost as powerful as the Xbox One X, possibly leaning towards a 1080p monitor with a much better frame rate. We don’t have more details about the capabilities of the console beyond that, but we do expect a number of games, and ray tracing, such as NVME drives, and a fast relaunch of many new game “next-gen” features.
– King King (T (h _h0x0d_)) September 8, 2020
The Xbox Series X is a 12 TF beast of console that will boast 4K resolution and 60 fps as standard, in all games up to 120 fps in multiplayer, with some games like Halo Infinity.
The prices that Microsoft has put forward for the Xbox Series S and Xbox Series X put them strongly in-line with the Xbox One S and Xbox One X, and it will be interesting to see what prices Sony offers in the price of the PlayStation 5 in competition.
Micro .ft x gen gen x access l access access financing will be pushed more broadly than this mass, which was seen as a pilot program. We expect the Xbox All Access Access to enter many more markets than ever before, and we expect the Xbox series to offer a console to launch simultaneously globally in existing Xbox markets, one slower than the one we saw for the Xbox in 2013.