The information comes from hardware disassembly channel Digital Foundry, courtesy of Video Games Chronicle In a reaction video about the Xbox Series S specs, Digital Foundry's John Linneman gave his opinion on how Xbox One X games would look on the less powerful of Microsoft's two new consoles
"If you play an Xbox One game [on the Xbox Series S], it won't be an Xbox One X version of the game; you won't get 360 4K backwards compatibility or anything like that," he said
As Digital Foundry editor Richard Leadbetter points out, the numbers seem to back up Linneman's claim:
"It hasn't been officially confirmed, but basically, rationally speaking, there's no other way," he Says" The Xbox One X has 9GB of system memory available for titles; the Series S has 8 Still, that's lower than the Xbox One X, so I think it's almost a foregone conclusion that backward compatibility will be drawn to the Xbox One S as opposed to the Xbox One X"
Essentially, the Xbox One X was designed to run certain games at 4K resolution, while the Xbox Series S was not The Series S is more powerful than the Xbox One X in most respects, but (presumably) not at all the same specs, especially when it comes to RAM
While this may be disappointing news from a purely technical standpoint, it is hard to imagine a case where the end user would be truly devastated; gamers who purchased the Xbox One X were probably attracted to its powerful specs and thus willing to pay a higher price The Xbox Series S is not for such users, who would instead buy the full-featured Xbox Series X
Furthermore, the Xbox Series S will maintain backward compatibility with the exact same game library as the Xbox Series X It is simply a matter of running (or not running) certain games in 4K, or improving frame rates and textures Again, this may be a deal-breaker for gamers who want to push their consoles to the limit, but probably not the kind of players who would buy an Xbox Series S in the first place
And again, educated speculation is not the same as confirmation from Microsoft, and since the Xbox Series S is still quite powerful, who knows, since the Xbox Series S already promises 4K upscaling, an Xbox One X feature, or even that similar to the Xbox One X does not seem to be entirely out of the question
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