
Microsoft Xbox One S 1TB Division 2
Score: 74/100
Zeust Xbox One S 1TB
Score: 80/100Rankings

The Xbox One S 1 TB All-Digital Edition provides a sleek, disc-free console with strong 4K media streaming and ample storage, but its older hardware and lack of native 4K gaming keep it behind newer generation consoles.

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 | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
1,000 GBbest | 1,000 GBbest | |
1.75 GHzbest | 1.75 GHzbest | |
853 MHz | 914 MHzbest | |
8 GBbest | 8 GBbest | |
12best | — | |
60 Hzbest | — | |
1best | 1best | |
175 Wbest | — |
Click an attribute name to sort · Green = best, red = worst (relative to this comparison)
| Attribute | ![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|---|
Performance(1) | ||
GPU Clock Speed (MHz) | 853 MHz | 914 MHz |
Display(1) | ||
Maximum Resolution | 1080p (upscaled 4K) | 4K UHD (video) |
Power & Design(1) | ||
Weight (kg) | 3.18 kg | 2.9 kg |

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

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.

“great value”

“was worthless to me”

“Love the clean look and no disc tray - feels more like a modern device.”




Professional reviewers praised the All-Digital Edition for its affordable price, sleek design, and solid 4K media streaming, while noting the lack of a disc drive and outdated hardware.
Everyday users enjoy the clean aesthetic and HDR video, but many criticize the limited storage and inability to play physical discs.