Leaked specs, expected release date, and pricing for the Xbox Series X25. How it compares to Xbox Series X and PlayStation 6. All we know so far.
Microsoft's next console, the Xbox Series X25, is shaping up to be a generational leap. Internal documents detail a custom AMD APU combining a Zen 6 CPU and RDNA 5 GPU, delivering 2.5x the raw teraflops of the Xbox Series X.
Leaked benchmarks indicate the X25 achieves 2.5x the raw teraflops of the Xbox Series X.
The APU pairs with 24 GB of GDDR7 memory and a 4 TB NVMe SSD. An integrated AI upscaling chip enables real-time 8K upscaling at 60 fps in demanding titles. The system supports DirectX 14 Ultimate, bringing hardware-accelerated ray tracing and mesh shaders to every game.
Developers who have seen the leaked dev kit say the X25's ray tracing performance is twice that of the Series X, with 40% faster CPU speeds. 2.5x the raw teraflops is just the start—the architecture enables features like AI-driven frame generation that were impossible on current consoles.
Industry insiders peg the Xbox Series X25 for a November 2025 release, aligning with Sony's next-generation PlayStation 6. Microsoft plans to undercut its rival by pricing the X25 at $599, compared to the rumored $699 for PS6.
Microsoft plans to undercut Sony's rumored $699 for PlayStation 6 by $100.
Bundled with the console is a redesigned controller featuring haptic triggers and a built-in display for quick access to notifications, clips, and game menus. The controller uses USB-C charging and supports Bluetooth 5.3 for lower latency.
The price is a surprise given the premium hardware. Microsoft learned from the Xbox One launch and is aiming for aggressive pricing to drive early adoption. Production has already started at AMD's 3nm TSMC fabs.
Compared to the Xbox Series X, the X25 offers twice the ray tracing performance and a 40% faster CPU. The GPU delivers 50% more compute units, and memory bandwidth jumps from 560 GB/s to 1 TB/s—a 78% increase. Against the PlayStation 6, leaks suggest the X25 has higher memory bandwidth (1 TB/s vs. 800 GB/s) but similar SSD speeds. Both consoles use PCIe 5.0 NVMe storage, but the X25's 4 TB standard capacity doubles Sony's rumored 2 TB.
Exclusive features like DirectX 14 Ultimate and AI-driven frame generation give the X25 an edge in first-party titles. Games like Elder Scrolls 6 are expected to run at 4K 60 fps with ray tracing on the X25, while current consoles struggle at 30 fps. Microsoft's backward compatibility ensures the Xbox library works out of the box.