Rankings

The Xbox One X (renewed) mirrors the original 2017 flagship with a powerful 6 TFLOPS GPU, 12 GB of GDDR5 memory and native 4K HDR gaming, plus a 4K Blu-ray player. It offers extensive backward compatibility but remains bulky and heavy.

The Xbox Series X is Microsoft's flagship console delivering unmatched raw performance, silent cooling and a robust ecosystem with Game Pass. It excels at 4K gaming and media playback but its size and costly storage upgrades are drawbacks.

The Xbox One S All-Digital Edition is a disc-free version of the One S, offering the same 1 TB storage and 4K HDR streaming capabilities in a sleek, compact chassis. It targets digital-first gamers but lacks a physical media drive and any performance improvements over the standard model.

The Xbox One S 1 TB bundle pairs the original Xbox One hardware with extra storage and a game bundle, offering solid backward compatibility and media features, but it lacks 4K gaming and a sleek design.
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|---|---|
1,024 GBbest | 1,000 GB | 1,024 GBbest | 1,000 GB | |
1.75 GHz | 3.8 GHzbest | 2.3 GHz | 1.75 GHz | |
914 MHz | 1,825 MHzbest | 1,172 MHz | 853 MHz | |
8 GB | 16 GBbest | 12 GB | 8 GB | |
— | 52best | 40 | 12 | |
— | 120 Hzbest | 60 Hz | 60 Hz | |
1best | 1best | 1best | 1best | |
— | 315 Wbest | 245 W | 175 W |
Click an attribute name to sort · Green = best, red = worst (relative to this comparison)
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Performance(4) | ||||
CPU Clock Speed (GHz) | 1.75 GHz | 3.8 GHz | 2.30 GHz | 1.75 GHz |
GPU Clock Speed (MHz) | 914 MHz | 1825 MHz | 1172 MHz | 853 MHz |
System Memory (RAM) (GB) | 8 GB | 16 GB | 12 GB | 8 GB |
GPU Compute Units | — | 52 | 40 | 12 |
Display(3) | ||||
Maximum Resolution | 4K UHD | 4K | 4K UHD | 1080p (upscaled 4K) |
Refresh Rate (Hz) | — | 120 Hz | 60 Hz | 60 Hz |
HDMI Version | 2.0a | HDMI 2.1 | 2.0b | 1.4 |
Connectivity(1) | ||||
Bluetooth Version | 4.0 | BLE | — | 4.0 |
Storage(3) | ||||
Internal Storage Capacity (GB) | 1024 GB | 1000 GB | 1024 GB | 1000 GB |
Storage Type | HDD | NVMe SSD | HDD | HDD |
Expandable Storage Support | false | true | true | — |
Power & Design(3) | ||||
Power Supply (W) | — | 315 W | 245 W | 175 W |
Weight (kg) | 0.454 kg | 4.445 kg | 4.536 kg | 3.18 kg |
Warranty Period (years) | — | 1 years | 0.25 years | 0.25 years |

Products in the top-left offer the best value (high score, low price).

Professional reviewers acknowledge the console's solid 1 TB storage, 4K streaming, and bundled games, but criticize its price relative to the disc-equipped Xbox One S and the lack of any performance gain.
Everyday users appreciate the smooth performance, ample storage, and compact design, especially for households that stream 4K content and rely on digital purchases. The most common complaints revolve around the missing disc drive, limited upgradeability, and occasional controller reliability problems.

“Runs smooth, no game disks required. Everything is downloaded.”

“Son loves it! Fresh clean look.”

“Excellent gaming experience, ease of use, and affordable price.”



Opt for the One X if you want top-tier graphics and native 4K; the All-Digital is better for budget-conscious digital-only users.
Xbox One X is the premium upgrade for 4K enthusiasts; Xbox One S suits 1080p users or tighter budgets.



Professional reviewers praise the raw power, near-silent cooling and Quick Resume, while noting the scarcity of exclusive titles and a cluttered UI.
Users love the silent operation, fast load times and Game Pass value, but complain about limited storage and the console's bulk.

Professional reviewers hailed the Xbox One X as the most powerful console of its generation, praising its native 4K rendering, HDR support, and quiet thermal design, while noting the lack of exclusive titles and a steep price.
Everyday users love the console's speed, visual upgrades on 4K displays, quiet operation, and the inclusion of a 4K Blu-ray player, but many express disappointment over the high cost and limited benefit on 1080p TVs.

Reviewers highlighted the bundle's timely release and added storage, but criticized the aging hardware, lack of 4K capability, and reliance on a mechanical HDD.
Users praise the generous 1 TB storage and The Division inclusion, while complaining about slow HDD performance and the absence of a Kinect.

