The Xbox Series X is once again on sale for $450 at Dell. That’s $50 off its usual going rate. We’ve seen this deal pop up before, but discounts on Microsoft’s highest-end game console have generally been rare since it arrived in late 2020, so this is another good opportunity to save.
This rare discount on Microsoft’s highest-end Xbox brings the console down to one of the lowest prices we’ve seen.
Compared to the $300 Xbox Series S, Microsoft’s other current-gen Xbox, the Series X packs a stronger GPU and 6GB more RAM, which lets it more consistently play demanding games at higher frame rates and resolutions. It also has a disc drive and twice as much storage by default at 1TB. You can still play every Xbox game on either console, but the gulf in power between the two devices is starting to become more evident; the hit RPG Baldur’s Gate III, for instance, will come to the Series S without split-screen co-op — something that will be available on the Series X — after developer Larian Studios had issues achieving feature parity with the less powerful machine. Broadly speaking, the Series X is built to play games in 4K at 60fps (or higher), while the Series S is more for 1440p or 1080p displays.
As for the games themselves, Microsoft has had some struggles producing first-party hits — we were lukewarm on its most recent blockbuster, the space RPG Starfield — but the Xbox library still has tons of titles we like, from blockbusters like Forza Horizon 5 and Halo Infinite to smaller gems like Hi-Fi Rush and Pentiment. If you like to sample a variety of games, an Xbox Game Pass subscription is still a decent value as well, though a recent price hike has made it a little less of a must-have.
The caveat to any Xbox deal right now is the trove of documents that accidentally leaked earlier this month as part of the FTC v. Microsoft court battle. That leak included details of an apparent Xbox Series X refresh that could arrive next year with a cylindrical design and 2TB of storage but no disc drive, which could make the current model more appealing for those who don’t want to go all-digital. As that info stems from older internal documents, however, it’s possible that those plans have changed over time.
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This story originally appeared on Engadget