Many of the experiences offered by the Xbox Series S and Series X are similar. However, some real distinctions in their capabilities go along with price.
To know more about the Xbox Series X, you can just further read the blog. Also, if you have anything related to games that you want to share, you can submit a write for us gaming category guest post.
1. Game Selection and Disc Drive
Due to its backward compatibility, the Series X and Series S can play nearly any game that can be played on an Xbox One.
Also available to them are the same new games. But the Series S can’t play physical games because it doesn’t have a disc drive.
2. Resolution
Since both models can output a 4K video stream, watching videos on a 4K TV should be consistent between the Series X and Series S. If you would like to play games on a 4K display, though, the Series X is a better choice.
Games with 4K resolutions are meant for the Series X, while 1080p and sometimes 1440p visuals work better with the less capable graphics on the Series S.
3. Graphics Quality
The fundamental graphics features of the Series X and Series S are identical, and they enable variable refresh rate, variable rate shading, and ray-traced images. However, if you’re playing on a Series S, certain games have already disabled ray tracing.
4. Base Storage
While the Series X has a 1 TB storage drive that provides about 800 GB of useful space, the Series S has a 512 GB drive with about 360 GB of usable capacity.
5. Expandable Storage
Both the Series X and Series S come with a slot that supports cards that use the CFexpress connection standard to provide expanded storage.
The retail costs of the sole memory cards with official licensing (Seagate) are typical for 512 GB models, approximately $185 for 1 TB, and approximately $360 for 2 TB models.
All Xbox One-formatted drives, however, will function immediately on any new console because the Series X and Series S still allow external USB drives.
6. Size
The Xbox Series X is a towering device that is roughly 6 by 6 inches at the base and 12 inches tall. In contrast, the Series S measures 11 by 5.9 by 2.6 inches. It is the tiniest Xbox ever made and can be positioned either horizontally or vertically.