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Forget Xbox Series X — cheaper Xbox Series S performance looks great

Forget Xbox Series X — cheaper Xbox Series S performance looks great

Xbox Series X vs Xbox Series S
(Image credit: Future)

We know the theoretical benefits of paying $499 for an Xbox Series Ten over $299 for an Xbox Series Southward. Microsoft has been clear that the former is targeting smooth 4K gaming, while the latter has the more than pocket-size goal of solid 2K performance.

But how exercise games actually perform across the systems? And, for that matter, if games support Smart Delivery, how do they perform on Xbox One? As information technology turns out, the Xbox Series S may deliver the results you need for a very good price.

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Thank you game developer Tomas Sala, we take several interesting data points. The Falconeer'south creator took to Twitter to reveal how the game runs on Xbox Series X, Xbox Series Southward and a current-generation Xbox One South.

How The Falconeer performs on Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S and Xbox One S

(Image credit: Tomas Sala/Twitter)

Equally y'all can see, the Xbox Serial X lives upward to its performance promise, providing 60fps gameplay at 4K – or for those with 120Hz television sets, a functioning mode offering 120fps at 1800p.

Meanwhile, Xbox Serial South provides 1800p gameplay at 60fps, or 120fps if you're happy to driblet to 1080p. Both platforms, thanks to the presence of SSD storage, promise load times of just thirteen seconds.

On an Xbox Ane Southward, all the same, you still get 60fps gameplay at 1080p, merely load times are more tripled to 42 seconds.

Sala went into a little more detail on the Unity blog. The Series Ten version runs as it would on a high-cease PC with "all the anti-aliasing" and "all those fancy effects", but he notes that both the Serial S and X offer a "very similar experience."

This is just one game, of course, but information technology'southward promising to come across practiced performance across the board. Sala is extremely complimentary to both next-generation Xboxes, saying that "there'south really no tradeoff betwixt graphics and performance with this generation.

"Ane of the big surprises for me is just how powerful the Series S is, information technology's such a significant piece of hardware in a small form factor," he explains. "This is a powerful piece of adjacent-gen hardware."

Elsewhere, Sala has suggested that the ability of next-generation consoles is such that it could change the way people develop games. Developers will potentially no longer exist forced to use tricks to create the illusion of living environments. "In well-nigh videogames things just end being alive at a certain distance from the role player; if they're non on-screen they just cease to exist in the simulation, or some simplified simulation would take over," he told Xbox Wire.

"When you wanted a more than complex simulation you would have to spend so much of your time optimising the simulation simply to arrive perform. I recall that's something the new generation offers – more than complex enemies and ecologies filled with creatures and enemies all exhibiting more than interesting behaviours. The big advantage I call back will be in open-world games, where we can stop using fume and mirrors to create an illusion for players, and focus on building more simulated worlds."

We're unlikely to come across the full power of next-generation consoles to begin with – specially with cross-platform games and remakes making up a big chunk of the launch list. But The Falconeer'south promised performance is still an enticing taste of what's to come in the next five years.

  • Next: Where to buy Xbox Serial Ten and Xbox Serial X

Freelance correspondent Alan has been writing near tech for over a decade, covering phones, drones and everything in between. Previously Deputy Editor of tech site Alphr, his words are establish all over the web and in the occasional magazine too. When not weighing up the pros and cons of the latest smartwatch, you'll probably discover him tackling his ever-growing games backlog. Or, more likely, playing Spelunky for the millionth time.

Source: https://www.tomsguide.com/news/xbox-series-x-vs-xbox-series-s-performance-results-just-revealed

Posted by: moellersaingthad.blogspot.com

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