The new Xbox Series consoles will start shipping to fans next week on November 10. However, one lucky redditor got their Series S console early and confirmed that there is a significant chunk of storage dedicated to system functions.
The Xbox Series S has a 512GB SSD built in, of which 364GB are available for game installations. Similarly, the Series X console has a 1TB SSD, of which 802GB are available. So that’s about 30% of memory reserved on the S and 20% on the X.
This reserved storage is for the OS as well as the Quick Resume feature, which needs to store gigabytes of game state data, so that you can jump straight back into the game.
If you need more room for your games – keep in mind modern AAA titles are massive – you can buy a storage expansion card. Seagate makes the official 1 TB card, which works on both the X and S and is as fast as the consoles’ internal SSDs. It costs $220, almost as much as the Series S itself. A 2 TB card is planned as well.
In case it wasn’t clear, standard 2.5” or M.2 SSDs cannot be used. External drives can be used, but only for previous generation games.
Microsoft claims that games on the Series S console will take up 30% less room than on the Series X, which should make the storage capacity easier to live with (the S targets 1440p, so it doesn’t need high resolution textures like the X, which will run games at 4K). Also, developers can let you uninstall parts of a game, e.g. the single player campaign, to free up more memory.
Both PlayStation 5 models have 825GB internal SSDs, of which 664GB is available for games (20% is reserved for the system). There’s a standard M.2 slot, which can run next-gen titles, but you’ll need a very fast PCIe 4.0 SSD.
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Author: Peter
Source: GSMArena