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Xbox Series S Expected To Outsell Series X, According To Xbox's Phil Spencer

Although it won't be the case at launch, Phil Spencer expects the Xbox Series S to be the big seller this console generation.

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Microsoft is just a few weeks away from launching its two next-generation consoles, the Xbox Series X and Series S. The two consoles differ significantly in terms of raw graphical power and price, but Xbox boss Phil Spencer expects the least powerful of the two to sell better.

In an interview with Kotaku, Spencer is asked about his thoughts on console sales during the upcoming holiday season. With stock limited and the appetite for new hardware outstripping potential supply, Spencer expects the Xbox Series X to take an early lead. He does not, however, expect that to be the case over the course of the generation.

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"I think, over the generation, our expectation would be that price really matters and that you would see the Series S sell more," Spencer stated.

Spencer also believes that at the outset, market share is going to be determined solely by the ability to supply enough consoles for the market. Referring to both Xbox and its main competitor this year, the PlayStation 5, Spencer says that early adopters will likely empty shelves faster than both Microsoft and Sony can stock them.

It wouldn't be strange for the Xbox Series X to outsell the Series S early on, however. Core players will likely be drawn to the more powerful system, and they're the ones who were prepared to purchase consoles as soon as they were put on sale.

With regards to the performance disparity between the Xbox Series X and Series S, Spencer says he understands some comments from developers worried about its reduced RAM, but notes that the PC market is evidence of how games can scale well across a range of configurations. He also mentions how the Series S can sometimes load games faster, thanks to the reduced size and resolution of the assets it uses for games.

The Xbox Series X and Series S launch on November 10, for $500 and $300 respectively. A list of launch titles has also been released, with special mentions for titles making use of Microsoft's Smart Delivery cross-generation program.

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KS253

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Edited By KS253

Maybe its bc im getting a little older but I upgraded to a one x and nice 4k tv and was honestly pretty disappointed as far as the jump to 4k vs 1080p is concerned. I did have a high end 1080p TV though. I am seriously considering going with the series s bc I just dont know if 4k really makes that much of a difference for me.

I think lower res and an fps bump would make the biggest difference. Im not pre ordering and will wait on real world reviews. Might be a year before I upgrade

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Spartan_418

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@ks253: If you have a big Xbox One game library already, should consider that the Series S will downgrade most of those backwards compatible games vs how they currently look on your One X. Not just down to 1080p, but to 900 or 720 or whatever the base Xbox One/One S ran them at

Might still make sense to do that, but I would keep the One X hooked up and use it for past-gen games and movies, rather than replacing it

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Atzenkiller

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Has that guy not heard of Sony selling the standard PS5 without a disc drive for only $100 more than their low budget Xbox? He might have been able to say that before the announcement but after it that Xbox is dead. And Whenever I've checked it on the German Amazon store over the past several weeks, the Xbox S was always still available for preorder. And it actually still is. Nothing has changed. I wonder how many of those things Amazon actually has received and how many they've been able to sell so far. But that sure does make it look like a flop so far. And looking at how much weaker the specs are and Sony's counteroffer, there's really zero reason for anyone to buy that thing.

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johnny0779

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Edited By johnny0779

@Atzenkiller: Please can you find me a Series X in Germany because I can't find one since they went on pre-order....

https://www.amazon.de/Microsoft-RRT-00009-Xbox-Series-1TB/dp/B08H93ZRLL/ref=mp_s_a_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=series%2Bs&qid=1602953508&sprefix=series&sr=8-4&th=1&psc=1

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Atzenkiller

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@johnny0779: I only mentioned the S model, which you can still preorder here: https://www.amazon.de/Microsoft-RRS-00009-Xbox-Series-512GB/dp/B087VM5XC6/ref=sr_1_3?__mk_de_DE=ÅMÅŽÕÑ&dchild=1&keywords=xbox%2Bs&qid=1603004693&sr=8-3&th=1

The X model has been sold out just as quickly as the PS5 as far as I'm aware.

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Just1MoHr

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Edited By Just1MoHr

I too am willing to bet against him, I am getting my Series X. I think they are more likely to get new customers from used XB1 & XB1x console sales than Series S.

I also hope they don't have all those great studios to flood the gaming market with poorer quality games, as they have so far. I want to be thrilled & amazed by AAA games & things we have not seen before. My bet is that they want to make as many games to infest the GamePass arena & XB owners will feel discontent yet again with only a few grand 1st party games to play.

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Atzenkiller

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@just1mohr: Well, what would be the point in buying an Xbone once the new low budget model has launched? Can't it play all Xbone games anyway? And it should be at least a bit more powerful than even the Xbone X, so if you only wanted to play Xbone games on it, that's the only reason I see for buying that thing as it only costs $300. But for only $100 more you get a full on PS5, so the Xbox S looks dead to me from the start. Before Sony'a announcement I would have thought that the Xbox S will sell pretty well as well, simply because it's a low budget option for folks who just buy their kids whatever. But now I don't see what kid would be happy with it when it could have a PS5 for not much more money.

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Edited By MoogleStar

I'm getting a PS5, but if I were getting an Xbox there is no way I would get the S. From what I've heard it's very gimped. A hardcore gamer like myself could never settle for that. The limited space alone is reason enough to stay away.

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