The Xbox Series S is very easily one particular of the most fascinating game consoles ever made. It is not so a lot about the underlying hardware—which is fascinating no doubt—but the positioning that tends to make it specific. It is one particular of two subsequent-gen consoles that Microsoft is launching this year, the other being the Xbox Series X. The Xbox Series S is getting billed as the worth console made to provide the latest—but not necessarily the greatest—technology, at a extra accessible cost.
One could argue, the Series S is not meant for hardcore gamers. Like for instance, it can not do native 4K gaming, which somehow tends to make it, significantly less considerable possibly, but that is not how I see it. Hardcore gamers would currently know that. Of course, they’d choose the Series X (or PS5, based on their preference). But what the Xbox Series S does—at least in theory—is that it unlocks a complete new level for these hunting to play the games of nowadays and tomorrow on a console that does not expense as much—as the Series X/PS5—without getting to compromise on the subsequent-gen essentials. Something like this has in no way occurred prior to.
Console, controller and setup
In a globe exactly where the Series X and PS5 exist, it can be hard for one more like-minded console to make its presence felt and but somehow, the Series S manages to leave a lengthy-lasting impression. Microsoft calls it the smallest Xbox ever and it is – you do not even have to sift via its spec-sheet to inform. You get the sense of how modest it is the moment you open the retail box. The console occupies an even smaller sized footprint inside the packaging. Then when you take it out, and when you really feel its weight for the very first time, you are left with each shock and awe at how thin and light it is.
The all-round design and style is really traditional. I like Microsoft’s dual tone colour scheme. All this guarantees the Series S can blend very easily into any background. Plus, this is the only new console that feels proper in each horizontal and vertical orientation. Despite its compact kind issue, the Series S has ample vents for airflow which includes a massive circular speaker-grille-like exhaust that is currently the speak of the town, to say the least.
The Series S has 3 USB 3.1 ports, an Ethernet port, a storage expansion slot, and HDMI 2.1 out – exact same as the Series X.
Microsoft is bundling a white wireless controller with the Series S that aligns perfectly with the central theme of the console. It is a very familiar controller that still runs on AA batteries, the only differences coming by way of a few subtle but very useful enhancements including a new quick share button, hybrid D-pad, and textured triggers. The Xbox controller isn’t given enough credit already and with Sony literally pushing the boundaries with Dual Sense this year, I can see how Microsoft’s incremental updates might put some people off, but it is what it is.
Like the console and controller, setting up the Series S is also simple and straightforward. This is easily done using the Xbox mobile app. The user interface is familiar territory too.
Hardware
The Series S is based on the same 8-core AMD Zen 2 CPU as the Series X. This is paired with an AMD RDNA 2 GPU, again same as the Series X. The Series S also has the same NVMe solid-state storage. Now the differences.
- The CPU in the Series S is clocked at 3.6GHz (this is 3.8GHz in the Series X).
- The GPU in the Series S comes with 20 compute units clocked at 1.563GHz delivering 4 TFLOPS (this is 52 CUs @1.825GHz for 12 TFLOPS in the Series X).
- The Series S has 10GB RAM @224GB/s with 8GB available to games (this is 16GB @560GB/s with 13.5GB available to games in the Series X).
- The Series S comes with 512GB SSD (2.4GB/s of sequential read) of which 364GB is usable (this is 1TB in the Series X).
Despite its dialled down approach, the Series S can pull off nearly every trick out the Series X’s textbook.
- Variable rate shading,
- variable refresh rate (up to 120Hz),
- hardware accelerated ray tracing,
- ultra-low latency,
- Quick Resume, and
- Smart Delivery
are all supported by the Series S.
Barring the resolution, the Series S, can—in theory—match the Series X in every perceivable way. I am not sure if this is by design, or a hardware limitation, but the Series S is a 1440p game console – though it can upscale games to 4K and natively stream/play 4K content. I won’t exactly call this a deal-breaker, especially considering the price, but this is something that you should keep in mind.
What can—and possibly will—be a deal-breaker for a lot of people, is the console’s usable space. This is accentuated by the all-digital nature of the console. Microsoft says Series S games will be relatively smaller in size since they won’t require additional 4K assets, and this may be true in some cases, but with most modern games crossing the 100GB threshold, 364GB of storage does not exactly inspire confidence. You can expand the console’s storage in two ways though both have serious drawbacks.
- The Series S—like the Series X—supports custom expansion cards. Only Seagate is making them for now, and as is usually the case with all proprietary storage, a 1TB Seagate storage expansion card for Series XS will set you back by $220 (roughly Rs 16,200). It is not even available in India yet though it should likely arrive on Flipkart and Amazon soon. Regardless, buying the Series X would make more sense over buying a custom expansion card for Series S.
- Or, you can alternatively play older titles (and archive new ones) off of any USB storage but do keep in mind that this will come at the cost of losing out on all the next-gen gains.
Performance
It is too early to foretell the long-term viability of a next-gen console like the Series S. At best, we can talk about early impressions—based on a few games I have played on it—and whether or not it has potential. The latter is easy to answer. The Series S is basking with potential. It is just phenomenal how Microsoft has been able to cram so much power inside a console so small—it is 60% smaller than the Series X—without messing up the thermals. The Series S runs whisper-quiet and barely loses a sweat even on extended usage putting my PS4/PS4 Pro to shame.
Early impressions have been a mixed bag. The one thing that has remained consistent throughout my review period, is the speed. To say the SSD inside it is fast, will be an understatement. The console boots up in seconds as if it were (always) in sleep mode. The same is true about game load times. Coming from an older-gen console, this is the first thing you’d notice about next-gen and there’s no way that it won’t blow your mind away. There’s one more benefit of fast storage, you can pause multiple games and the system will remember where you left even after you restart the console. Not all games support this but the ones that do, work as advertised.
Speaking of games, this is where the inconsistency arises. There are broadly two types of games that you can play on the Series S (or, even the Series X). a.) First party/third party optimised titles, and b.) Backward compatible titles. The latter work, or rather play, as expected which is to say that we’re essentially looking at faster load times and more stable frame rates – but to be clear, nothing revolutionary. The Series S being a 1440p console takes Xbox One S (and not Xbox One X) as base and goes from there, that’s in the rough ball figure of 900p/30fps. The Series X, that targets true 4K, will be able to squeeze more out of legacy games if that is what you’re looking for.
As for optimised titles, it is already starting to get clear that not all Series S games will be created equal. Also, not all Series S and Series X games will be the same as far as graphical output/features is concerned. Take for instance, Devil May Cry 5: Special Edition. The game supports hardware-accelerated ray tracing on the Series X, but not on the Series S. At the same time, Watch Dogs: Legion supports it on both the Series X and Series S.
The bigger concern is, most games, including Microsoft’s own Forza Horizon 4 cap at 1080p. That’s not to say there are no 1440p games. Yakuza: Like a Dragon and Gears Tactics are a few examples. But Microsoft’s whole marketing pitch revolves around the Series S being a 1440p game console so most—if not all—next-gen games should have held on to that promise. That’s aside from the fact that the console has no “exclusive” at launch to showcase the full capabilities of next-gen. Instead, we have:
- Assassin’s Creed Valhalla—1440p @30fps
- Watch Dogs: Legion—1080p @30fps
- Yakuza: Like a Dragon—1440p @30fps
- Forza Horizon 4—1080p @60fps
- Sea of Thieves—1080p @60fps
- Gears 5—1440p @60fps
- Fortnite—1080p @60fps
- Doom Eternal—900p @60fps
Should you buy the Xbox Series S
As I said in the very beginning of this review, the Series S is not so much about the hardware but positioning. Though this is subject to debate in India. In India, the Series S costs Rs 34,990 which is roughly equivalent to $475. While globally, the console retails for $299 or roughly Rs 22,000. With due respect to every import factor that adds to overall cost, I still can’t help but point out that Microsoft could have priced the Series S better in India. Its Xbox All Access program that lets you buy a Series S starting from $24.99 a month (for 24 months) in addition to giving free access to 24 months of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, is also not available in India. For some context, the PS5 Digital Edition (which is essentially a PS5 without a disk drive) is priced at Rs 39,990.
Speaking of which, the Xbox Game Pass is a great motivator to get the Series S, especially for casual gamers, or for that matter, even Sony PlayStation fans. Microsoft’s Netflix-style game subscription service is just insane value for money and it keeps getting better over time.
From a pure technological point of view, the Series S stands tall as an engineering marvel. It is not perfect but it is also easy to look past its imperfections, because on the other side lies great power and portability. The Series S is no starter pack to next-gen but a solid next-gen console through and through, albeit one that’s of a different kind and for a different target audience. Here’s hoping it can stand the test of time.
Pros:
- Good looks, compact form factor
- Shares core hardware with more expensive Series X
- Can pull through nearly every Series X trick
- Whisper-quite
Cons:
- Inconsistent game catalogue
- No exclusive title to showcase true potential
- 364GB usable space, custom expansion is expensive
- India price could be better