• Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Cyber
  • GRC
  • Blogs
  • Live CVE
No Result
View All Result
Sumtrix
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Cyber
  • GRC
  • Blogs
  • Live CVE
No Result
View All Result
Sumtrix
No Result
View All Result
Home Latest News

Microsoft is raising prices on the Xbox Series S and Series X

Max Mueller by Max Mueller
May 1, 2025
in Latest News
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Microsoft is dramatically increasing the price of the Xbox Series X and Series S, as well as new games and accessories. As of today, the Series S will start at $380, up from $300, while the Series X will begin at $550, a $100 increase from its previous price. As for the 1TB Series S, it now costs $430, up from $350. Meanwhile, if you want the Series X with disc drive, it will now set you back $600. Lastly, the 2TB Galaxy Black Special Edition now costs an eye-watering $730. 

Additionally, Microsoft says beginning this holiday season “some” new first-party games will release at $80. As a small consolation, if you purchase one of those games through the Xbox Store, it will support Microsoft’s Play Anywhere feature, allowing you to play it on PC at no additional cost. 

Read

App Store Power and Censorship: How Apple and Google Shape Your Digital Future

Google Sets Sights on Defying Gravity with Antigravity Project

At the same time, the company is increasing the price of nearly all of its first-party and peripherals. Most notably, a core controller will now set you back $65. Microsoft is also increasing pricing in Europe, UK, Australia and many other countries. 

“We understand that these changes are challenging, and they were made with careful consideration given market conditions and the rising cost of development,” the company said. “Looking ahead, we continue to focus on offering more ways to play more games across any screen and ensuring value for Xbox players.”

Historically, the price of consoles has gone down, not up, mid-generation. In 2002, for instance, Sony cut the price of the PlayStation 2 from $299 to $199. Alongside the system’s extensive game library, Sony’s aggressive pricing strategy was widely credited for the PS2’s runaway success. Similarly, Sony revived the PlayStation 3’s fortunes in 2009 with the console’s ‘Slim’ redesign and price cut to $299. The fact Microsoft is now increasing the price of the Xbox Series X/S nearly five years after release is likely to kill whatever little momentum the two consoles had.  

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/microsoft-is-raising-prices-on-the-xbox-series-s-and-series-x-132004594.html?src=rss

​ Microsoft is dramatically increasing the price of the Xbox Series X and Series S, as well as new games and accessories. As of today, the Series S will start at $380, up from $300, while the Series X will begin at $550, a $100 increase from its previous price. As for the 1TB Series S, it now costs $430, up from $350. Meanwhile, if you want the Series X with disc drive, it will now set you back $600. Lastly, the 2TB Galaxy Black Special Edition now costs an eye-watering $730. 
Additionally, Microsoft says beginning this holiday season “some” new first-party games will release at $80. As a small consolation, if you purchase one of those games through the Xbox Store, it will support Microsoft’s Play Anywhere feature, allowing you to play it on PC at no additional cost. 
At the same time, the company is increasing the price of nearly all of its first-party and peripherals. Most notably, a core controller will now set you back $65. Microsoft is also increasing pricing in Europe, UK, Australia and many other countries. 
“We understand that these changes are challenging, and they were made with careful consideration given market conditions and the rising cost of development,” the company said. “Looking ahead, we continue to focus on offering more ways to play more games across any screen and ensuring value for Xbox players.”
Historically, the price of consoles has gone down, not up, mid-generation. In 2002, for instance, Sony cut the price of the PlayStation 2 from $299 to $199. Alongside the system’s extensive game library, Sony’s aggressive pricing strategy was widely credited for the PS2’s runaway success. Similarly, Sony revived the PlayStation 3’s fortunes in 2009 with the console’s ‘Slim’ redesign and price cut to $299. The fact Microsoft is now increasing the price of the Xbox Series X/S nearly five years after release is likely to kill whatever little momentum the two consoles had.  This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/microsoft-is-raising-prices-on-the-xbox-series-s-and-series-x-132004594.html?src=rss 

Previous Post

If You Liked ‘Havoc,’ Netflix Has an Even More Thrilling (and Violent) Show by the Same Director

Next Post

ASUS adds, then removes, the ability to detect sagging in its latest ROG Astral GPUs

Max Mueller

Max Mueller

More Articles

MMaDA-Parallel: Advanced Multimodal Model Revolutionizing Content Generation
AI

MMaDA-Parallel: Advanced Multimodal Model Revolutionizing Content Generation

MMaDA-Parallel is a cutting-edge framework for multimodal content generation that departs from traditional sequential models by enabling parallel processing of...

by Jane Doe
November 19, 2025
The Proxmox Virtual Environment 9.1 is available now
Latest News

The Proxmox Virtual Environment 9.1 is available now

Summary for Easy Reference Proxmox Virtual Environment 9.1 improves usability and security with enhanced high-availability and disaster recovery features. Enhanced...

by Jane Doe
November 19, 2025
European Union Introduces New Regulations Changing Data Privacy Landscape
AI

European Union Introduces New Regulations Changing Data Privacy Landscape

The European Union is implementing significant updates to its regulatory framework governing data privacy and automated decision-making. These new regulations,...

by Sumit Chauhan
November 19, 2025
Cloudflare Outage on November 18, 2025: A Deep Dive by Sumtrix
Blogs

Cloudflare Outage on November 18, 2025: A Deep Dive by Sumtrix

On the 18th of November, 2025, a significant outage rippled through Cloudflare’s global network starting at 11:20 UTC. Users attempting...

by Mayank Singh
November 19, 2025
Next Post

ASUS adds, then removes, the ability to detect sagging in its latest ROG Astral GPUs

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

I agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

CKGSB Launches New White Paper on China’s Role in the Global AI Race

CKGSB Launches New White Paper on China’s Role in the Global AI Race

July 1, 2025
Unveiling the Secret Defense Tactics of Four Key Industries Against Cyber Threats

Unveiling the Secret Defense Tactics of Four Key Industries Against Cyber Threats

June 2, 2025
Southeast Asia’s Online Scam Industry is a Global Menace

Southeast Asia’s Online Scam Industry is a Global Menace

May 27, 2025
Rethinking Risk: How the GRC Cube Transforms Security Leadership

Rethinking Risk: How the GRC Cube Transforms Security Leadership

May 25, 2025
Cybersecurity at GITEX 2025: Key Takeaways from Berlin

Cybersecurity at GITEX 2025: Key Takeaways from Berlin

May 24, 2025
Stay Safe from Ransomware Using Skitnet Malware Techniques

Stay Safe from Ransomware Using Skitnet Malware Techniques

May 20, 2025
App Store Power and Censorship: How Apple and Google Shape Your Digital Future

App Store Power and Censorship: How Apple and Google Shape Your Digital Future

November 19, 2025
Sumtrix.com

© 2025 Sumtrix – Your source for the latest in Cybersecurity, AI, and Tech News.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • AI
  • Cyber
  • GRC
  • Blogs
  • Live CVE

© 2025 Sumtrix – Your source for the latest in Cybersecurity, AI, and Tech News.

Our website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.